This guide compares two popular model lines—Nano X and Stax—focusing on wireless setup, daily workflows, and technical differences that matter for long-term storage. If you're moving from hot wallets or a custodial platform to a hardware wallet, these are practical points you should understand. I tested each device over multiple months and used them in desktop and mobile workflows; what follows reflects those hands-on observations (including what felt smooth, and what caused friction).
What arrives in the box matters because supply-chain safety starts before you power the device. Typical kit contents include the device itself, a recovery card (to write your seed phrase), basic cables, and documentation. During unboxing I check for tamper cues and make sure the package seals look untampered. (If anything seems off, do not use the device and check seller safety.) See more on safe sellers and tamper risks: [/where-to-buy-and-seller-safety].
For a short hands-on note: the Nano X feels compact and button-driven. The Stax arrives with a much larger display area and a different input model; both are usable on a desk or in a mobile setup, but they aim at slightly different user flows.
This section covers a typical nano x setup with Bluetooth and Ledger Live mobile. Steps are similar for mobile-first setups across devices.
Why confirm codes? That step prevents a classic man-in-the-middle pairing attack. And yes, it adds a second check that matters when using Bluetooth.
If Bluetooth pairing fails, try the USB cable route — see troubleshooting guides for connection issues: [/troubleshoot-cannot-connect] and [/usb-cables-pairing].
Setting up a Stax device follows the same high-level steps: initialize on-device, pick a PIN, record the seed phrase, and pair to the mobile or desktop companion. Stax's larger display changes the interaction model: reading transaction details on the device is easier (that matters when you want to verify addresses visually before signing). That extra display space can reduce errors during high-value transfers.
Stax also targets a more visual, mobile-friendly workflow, which some users will prefer for daily use cases (checking balances, approving DeFi interactions), while others will stick to the smaller-button device for simplicity.
For a full setup primer and checklist see [/setup-overview] and mobile pairing tips at [/mobile-setup].
Both models isolate private keys inside a secure element (secure chip). This means private keys never leave the device and are not exposed to your phone or computer. But connectivity—Bluetooth, USB, or otherwise—creates an extra surface to manage.
Supply-chain verification matters too. Always verify firmware authenticity before major use—instructions are at [/firmware-update-verify] and [/firmware-updates-and-verification].
Seed phrases follow BIP-39 standards in many hardware wallets. A 12-word recovery phrase is easier to handle, but a 24-word phrase gives more entropy for long-term cold storage. Which should you pick? For long-term, high-value holdings I prefer 24 words. For small daily balances, 12 can be pragmatic.
Passphrase (the so-called 25th word) creates a hidden wallet layered on top of the seed phrase. It adds plausible deniability and separation but increases the risk of permanent loss if you forget it. Store it separately and consider using a secure passphrase manager or a physical split backup. See guidance at [/passphrase-usage-risks] and metal backup options at [/metal-backup-plates].
Shamir backup (SLIP-39) is an alternative that splits a recovery across multiple shares. It's useful for distributed backups and inheritance planning; read more at [/backup-metal-slip39].
For day-to-day tasks you’ll use the companion app to install coin-specific apps, check balances, and build transactions. Keep these practices in mind:
See detailed app installation and space management steps at [/install-apps-manage-space].
Multi-signature setups increase redundancy and reduce single points of failure. They also reduce single-actor theft risk. But multisig adds complexity: extra devices, coordination, and backups. If you hold institutional-sized amounts or want distributed geographic custody, multisig is worth considering. For walkthroughs and compatible wallet options see [/multisig-setup-ledger].
If you hit errors during setup, these pages can help: [/troubleshoot-install-errors], [/troubleshoot-firmware-stuck], [/troubleshoot-cannot-connect].
| Feature | Nano X | Stax | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Input & display | Small screen + physical buttons | Larger integrated touchscreen | Larger display helps transaction verification |
| Connectivity | Bluetooth + USB | Wireless pairing (mobile) + USB | Confirm pairing codes on-device for wireless use |
| Mobile experience | Mobile-friendly | More visual, mobile-first UI | Both work with companion app; workflows differ |
| Typical use-case | Balanced mobile/desktop use | Visual verification and frequent mobile checks | Choose based on how you verify transactions |
| Backups & recovery | Standard BIP-39 seed phrase | Standard BIP-39 seed phrase (passphrase supported) | Consider SLIP-39 for distributed backups |
Pros/cons (short):
Q: Can I recover my crypto if the device breaks? A: Yes — if you have your seed phrase. Follow the recovery guide at [/recovery-when-device-breaks]. Always test recovery on a spare device before long-term storage.
Q: What happens if the company goes bankrupt? A: The security model is non-custodial: as long as you control your seed phrase and passphrase, you control the crypto. See [/company-bankruptcy-and-business-risk].
Q: Is Bluetooth safe for a hardware wallet? A: Bluetooth is convenient and workable for most users, provided you confirm pairing codes on-device, keep firmware up to date, and avoid pairing in public spaces. For maximum security, use USB or air-gapped signing.
Both Nano X and Stax support mobile workflows and on-device verification, but they take different approaches to input and display. Your choice should depend on how often you need to approve transactions on the go, how comfortable you are with wireless pairing, and whether you plan to implement multisig or other advanced backups.
If you want setup checklists and downloads, start with the general setup overview and the Ledger Live install guide. For deeper reading on backups and passphrase risks, see [/seed-phrase-basics], [/passphrase-usage-risks], and [/backup-recovery-best-practices].
Want a focused walkthrough? Follow the step-by-step for Nano X above, or consult the Stax setup section and test a small transaction first. I found that running a low-value test transfer reduces stress and catches pairing quirks early. But remember: always secure your seed phrase offline, and keep backups physically separate.
For model comparison and next-layer details, visit the compare page: [/compare-models].