Safe & secure Orchid Protocol wallet
Take control of your Orchid Protocol assets with complete confidence in the Trezor ecosystem.
- Secured by your hardware wallet
- Use with compatible hot wallets
- Trusted by over 2 million customers

Send & receive your Orchid Protocol with the Trezor Suite app
Send & receive
Buy & swap
Trezor hardware wallets that support Orchid Protocol
Sync your Trezor with wallet apps
Manage your Orchid Protocol with your Trezor hardware wallet synced with several wallet apps.
Trezor Suite
MetaMask
Rabby
Supported Orchid Protocol Network
- Ethereum
Why a hardware wallet?
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 OXT on Trezor
Connect your Trezor
Install Trezor Suite

Transfer your OXT

Make the most of your OXT
Trezor keeps your OXT secure
- Protected by Secure Element
The best defense against both online and offline threats
- Your tokens, your control
Absolute control of every transaction with on-device confirmation
- Security starts with open-source
Transparent wallet design makes your Trezor better and safer
- Clear & simple wallet backup
Recover access to your digital assets with a new backup standard
- Confidence from day one
Packaging & device security seals protect your Trezor’s integrity
The Orchid Protocol organizes bandwidth sellers into a structured peer-to-peer (P2P) network termed the Orchid Market. Customers connect to the Orchid Market and pay bandwidth sellers in order to form a proxy chain to a specific resource on the Internet.
Unlike more common methods for sending and receiving data from the global Internet, proxy chains in the Orchid Market naturally separate information about the source of data from information about its destination; no single relay or proxy holds both pieces of information, or knows the identity of someone who does. The structure of the Orchid Market further supports this separation of information by providing strong resistance against collusion attacks – the ability of a group of bandwidth sellers to overcome this separation of knowledge.
The Internet was originally an open platform where people could freely learn and communicate. Unfortunately, as the Internet grew it became a place where people could be monitored, controlled, and censored. We're building a new civil contract around a distributed marketplace for computation, storage, and bandwidth to provide the framework for a new form of digital citizenship.