What is a seed phrase?
A seed phrase is a list of recovery words, often 12 or 24 words, generated when you create a self-custody wallet. Those words can recreate the private keys that control your crypto addresses. The wallet app is replaceable. The phone is replaceable. The seed phrase is the thing that lets you recover access.
This is why wallet security feels different from bank security. A bank can reset a password after identity checks. A blockchain cannot identify you. The network only sees valid signatures from keys.
The rules that matter most
- Write the words on paper or metal, not in a note app.
- Do not photograph them.
- Do not save them in email, cloud storage, password managers, or messaging apps unless you fully understand the risk model.
- Never enter them into a website that appears after clicking an ad or support link.
- Keep the backup away from people who should not be able to move your funds.
Why screenshots and cloud backups are dangerous
A screenshot feels convenient until you remember how many devices sync photos automatically. If your phone account, laptop, browser, or cloud backup is compromised, the seed phrase may be exposed without you noticing. Crypto theft is often silent: the attacker waits, watches balances grow, and drains the wallet later.
For small learning amounts, an app wallet may be fine. For long-term storage, treat the recovery phrase as a physical security object.
A safer beginner setup
Start with a tiny test wallet. Write down the phrase. Delete the wallet app. Restore it from the phrase. If you can recover the empty wallet, you understand the process. Then use the same discipline before storing meaningful funds.
If you are choosing between wallet types, read hot wallets vs cold wallets. If you do not yet understand addresses and keys, start with keys and wallet addresses.
FAQ
Can customer support ask for my seed phrase?
No. Real wallet support should never need your seed phrase. Anyone asking for it can move your funds.
Should I split my seed phrase into pieces?
Advanced users sometimes use split backups, but beginners often create new risks by forgetting where pieces are or making recovery too complex. Keep the setup simple until you understand the trade-offs.
What happens if I lose my seed phrase?
If your wallet is still accessible, move funds to a new wallet with a backed-up phrase. If the device is gone and the phrase is gone, recovery is usually impossible.