You’ve got SOL, some NFTs, maybe a few staking rewards sitting idle. Now what? Picking the right wallet feels like choosing a lane on I‑95 during rush hour—doable, but stressful if you rush it. This piece breaks down the practical differences between mobile wallets, browser extensions, and hardware wallets for Solana users who want staking and NFT support, and points you toward a solid browser extension option that integrates both staking and NFT management.
Short version: mobile wallets are convenient, browser extensions are slick for dApps and NFTs, and hardware wallets give you the best cold‑storage security. Each choice trades convenience for control and safety in slightly different ways. Read on for the scenarios where each makes sense, how they work together, and what to watch for when you want to stake or show off an NFT collection.

Solana’s ecosystem wants to be accessible. Wallets evolved to meet usage patterns: mobile for everyday activity, extensions to plug into web dApps, and hardware for long‑term security. They overlap a lot. You can use a mobile app to stake, or connect a hardware device through a browser extension to interact with marketplaces. The options are there so you can match your risk tolerance and habits to the right tool.
For example, if you buy an NFT on a marketplace you visit in a browser, an extension that connects directly to that site makes the flow frictionless. If you move SOL you plan to HODL for months, a Ledger or similar device is worth considering. If you transfer funds daily, mobile is far easier.
Browser extensions are the bridge between your keys and web apps. They let you sign transactions in‑page, view NFTs, and often include staking UIs. For Solana users who care about NFTs and frequent dApp interaction, extensions are usually the most ergonomic choice.
Look for extensions that: show NFT metadata, let you delegate stake to validators, and support hardware wallet connections. One extension that covers those bases and has a user‑friendly staking flow is available here. It’s a good example of an extension that balances dApp convenience with staking and NFT features.
Security notes: extensions are more exposed than hardware wallets. If the extension stores a seed phrase locally, treat that device like cash. Prefer extensions that support hardware devices so you can keep the private key offline while still using web apps.
Mobile wallets are what most people use for day‑to‑day crypto. They’re great for quick transactions, mobile staking, and showing or sending NFTs from your phone. Modern mobile wallets also include built‑in marketplaces and staking dashboards.
But remember: phones can be lost or compromised. Back up your seed phrase and consider using passcodes and biometric locks. If you plan to stake small amounts or interact with NFTs on the go, mobile is perfect. For larger positions, pair mobile access with a hardware backup.
If you hold meaningful value, a hardware wallet is the single most effective mitigation against remote compromise. Ledger devices are broadly supported across Solana wallets and marketplaces. Hardware wallets sign transactions offline, so even if your browser is compromised, your keys stay safe.
Downsides: hardware adds friction. Connecting a device, approving each transaction, and managing multiple accounts takes time. That’s intentional. Use a hardware wallet for cold storage, and use a separate hot wallet (mobile or extension) for day‑to‑day activity.
Here are three practical setups depending on behavior and risk tolerance:
Mixing devices is easy: create an account on your hardware device, then add that account to an extension to sign web transactions while keeping the private key off the internet. This hybrid gives you UX without sacrificing security.
Staking on Solana is usually a straightforward delegation process—pick a validator and delegate from within your wallet UI. Check validator performance and commission rates before delegating. Many extensions and apps offer one‑click staking flows that show expected APR and your active delegations.
For NFTs, make sure the wallet displays metadata and token provenance—some wallets fetch detailed metadata, others only show token IDs. If you plan to list or transfer NFTs, verify that your chosen wallet supports the marketplace you’ll use and that it shows royalties and metadata correctly.
Yes. Many Solana extensions support Ledger and similar devices. That allows you to sign web transactions with an offline key. It’s the best of both worlds: dApp compatibility and hardware security.
Most major wallets provide staking UIs in both extensions and mobile apps. They let you delegate, redeem, and monitor rewards without using the command line. Fees on Solana are low, so staking flows are usually fast and inexpensive.
Keep NFTs in the account tied to the wallet you use for marketplaces. If you move an NFT to a hardware‑protected account, you’ll need that hardware device to sign any transfer. Use a hot wallet for frequent trades and a hardware‑backed account for long‑term collectibles.