Safe & secure Maker wallet

Take control of your Maker assets with complete confidence in the Trezor ecosystem.

Send & receive your Maker with Trezor Hardware wallets

Trezor Suite is an app designed to work with Maker, available on desktop, web & mobile.
Send & receive
Send & receive
Easily move your Maker from any wallet or exchange to your Trezor hardware wallet.
Buy, sell & swap
Buy & swap
Move, save & store your assets using your Trezor hardware wallet.

Trezor hardware wallets that support Maker

Sync your Trezor with wallet apps

Manage your Maker with your Trezor hardware wallet synced with several wallet apps.

  • Trezor Suite
  • Metamask
  • Rabby

Supported Maker Networks

  • Polygon POS
  • Ethereum
  • Avalanche
  • Energi

Why a hardware wallet?

Play

Go offline with Trezor

  • You own 100% of your coins
  • Your wallet is 100% safe offline
  • Your data is 100% anonymous
  • Your coins aren’t tied to any company

Online exchanges

  • If an exchange fails, you lose your coins
  • Exchanges are targets for hackers
  • Your personal data may be exposed
  • You don’t truly own your coins

How to MKR on Trezor

1

Connect your Trezor

Connect your Trezor hardware wallet to your computer or mobile device. If you don’t have one yet, you can buy it here.
2

Install Trezor Suite

Install Trezor Suite
Download and install the Trezor Suite app for the best experience, or open the web app on your browser.
3

Transfer your MKR

Transfer your coin
Open Trezor Suite, select Maker, go to "Receive," show full address, verify it on your Trezor, copy & paste it into your exchange's "Send to" field. Voilà!
4

Make the most of your MKR

Once the Maker transfer is complete, you can easily and securely manage your Maker with your Trezor hardware wallet, all through the Trezor Suite app.

Trezor keeps your MKR secure

Get your MKR wallet

Trezor Safe 5 - Black Graphite
Trezor Safe 5
USD 169
More
Trezor Safe 3 - Cosmic Black
Trezor Safe 3
USD 79
More
Trezor Model One - White
Trezor Model One
USD 34.3
USD 49
More
Trezor Model T
Trezor Model T
USD 77.2
USD 129
More

Maker in a nutshell

MKR is a cryptocurrency depicted as a smart contract platform and works alongside the Dai coin and aims to act as a hedge currency that provides traders with a stable alternative to the majority of coins currently available on the market. Maker offers a transparent stablecoin system that is fully inspectable on the Ethereum blockchain. Founded almost three years ago, MakerDao is lead by Rune Christensen, its CEO and founder. Maker’s MKR coin is a recent entrant to the market and is not a well known project. However, after today it will be known by many more people after blowing up 40% and it is one of the coins to rise to prominence during the recent peaks and troughs. After being developed by the MakerDAO team, Maker Dai officially went live on December 18th, 2017. Dai is a price stable coin that is suitable for payments, savings, or collateral and provides cryptocurrency traders with increased options concerning opening and closing positions. Dai lives completely on the blockchain chain with its stability unmediated by the legal system or trusted counterparties and helps facilitate trading while staying entirely in the world of cryptocurrencies. The concept of a stablecoin is fairly straight forward – it’s a token that has its price or value pegged to a particular fiat currency. A stablecoin is a token (like Bitcoin and Ethereum) that exists on a blockchain, but unlike Bitcoin or Ethereum, Dai has no volatility. MKR is an ERC-20 token on the Ethereum blockchain and can not be mined. It’s instead created/destroyed in response to DAI price fluctuations in order to keep it hovering around $1 USD. MKR is used to pay transaction fees on the Maker system, and it collateralizes the system. Holding MKR comes with voting rights within Maker’s continuous approval voting system. Bad governance devalues MKR tokens, so MKR holders are incentivized to vote for the good of the entire system. It’s a fully decentralized and democratic structure, then, which is an underutilized USP of blockchain tech. Value volatility is a relative concept among both cryptos and fiat currencies. The US dollar, for example, was worth 110.748 yen on July 9, 2018. On July 4, 2011, $1 was worth 80.64 yen, and on March 18, 1985, $1 was worth 255.65 yen. These are major differences in exchange rates, and inflation within each country makes each currency worth different values even when compared to themselves. One USD in 1913 is worth the equivalent of $25.41 today, and even $1 in 1993 is worth the equivalent of $1.74 today. Stablecoins don’t negate these basic economic principles of value. Instead, both Tether and Dai have values pegged to the U.S. dollar. This is done to stabilize the price.

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