Trust Wallet, one of the largest providers of non-custodial wallets with an audience of 220 million users, will allow AI agents to independently make swaps and trading operations across more than 25 blockchain networks.
"The agent economy will arrive sooner than anyone expected," says the new CEO of Trust Wallet, Felix Fan, who previously served as the product director at the OKX exchange. "Developers can now create agents that work with real wallets under the rules set by users."
Two modes — two levels of trust
The system operates in two modes. The first allows the creation of a separate wallet for AI activity and sets limits in advance: the agent independently performs routine tasks — regular purchases, monitoring signals, executing limit orders — without asking for permission each time. The second mode, which Trust Wallet calls unique in the market, connects the agent to the user's already existing wallet: the agent formulates a transaction proposal and waits for confirmation from the owner.
The built-in functionality covers swaps, automation, limit orders, portfolio tracking, and risk assessment. Ethereum-compatible networks are supported, as well as Solana, Bitcoin, TON, Tron, NEAR, and Sui.
From Ethereum wallet to 220 million users
Trust Wallet was founded in 2017 in Bahrain as a mobile wallet focused on Ethereum. The following year, Binance founder Changpeng Zhao acquired a controlling stake in the company. Over the past three years, the user base has grown from 40 million to 220 million people, and losses, which were around $10 million a year, have been reduced to almost zero by the end of 2025.
Last week, the company opened a portal for developers, providing AI systems with read-only access to data from over 100 blockchains — including prices, token information, and risk signals.
Wallet as a smart assistant
Trust Wallet's strategy is to turn cryptocurrency trading into an experience based on intentions rather than manual control. Instead of forcing the user to navigate through swap interfaces, staking screens, and order settings, the company aims for simplicity: the user states what they want to do — stake Ethereum, transfer $100 to Bitcoin — and the system takes care of the execution mechanics. "We abstract the complexity and provide the user with a result-oriented experience," adds Fan.
In the coming months, AI features will appear directly within the wallet: analytics, automated strategies, personalized notifications, and transaction proposals with manual confirmation options. The launch of an agents marketplace is also planned — a platform where developers can publish ready-made strategies and trading bots for use within the application.
At the same time, Fan does not hide that the risks have not gone anywhere. The first users are likely to be those who are ready for experiments and tolerant of uncertainty. "We simply help them do what they may already be doing manually. But we will explain to users: there is a risk that the agent will use their funds in a way they did not expect."
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