Verification Data — v1.4.5 Verified

PlatformSHA-256MD5
Chrome Extensione1b6d9a3f5c24e8b7a…9c2e61e6b1d4f9…5d37
Hashes above are truncated for display. Always compare against the official release page or use the WalletGuard Verify Tool.

After downloading, compute and compare the file hash:

  1. Windows (PowerShell):
    Get-FileHash .\unisat-installer -Algorithm SHA256
  2. macOS / Linux:
    sha256sum unisat-installer
  3. Compare the output to the hash on this page or use the WalletGuard Verify Tool.
  4. Matching hashes ✓ — install safely. Mismatching hashes ✗ — delete the file and re-download from the official source only.

GPG signing key not publicly distributed for this wallet. Rely on SHA-256 hash verification.

GitHub — unisat-wallet

740
Stars
140
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Proprietary
License
Release: v1.4.5 · March 18, 2025 Commit: us91ab3 Chains: Bitcoin

History & Background

UniSat launched in 2023 during the Ordinals inscription boom and quickly became the dominant wallet for users interacting with Bitcoin NFTs and BRC-20 tokens. It pioneered tooling for Ordinals trading, inscription creation, and BRC-20 token management.

WalletGuard tracks every official release of UniSat Wallet and cross-references download hashes against the developer-signed artifacts so you can verify what you install.

Who should use UniSat Wallet

Best for: Bitcoin users who interact with Ordinals, inscriptions, and BRC-20 tokens. Standard BTC send/receive is also supported.

Custody type: Self-custody

Risk profile: Closed-source Bitcoin extension. The Ordinals/BRC-20 space is newer and has fewer security audits. Verify the extension ID carefully.

Features

Ordinal inscriptionsBRC-20BTC send/receivePSBT supportAddress managementdApp signing
Warning: Newer ecosystem: Ordinals tooling is less battle-tested than standard Bitcoin wallet code.
Self-custody notice: UniSat Wallet is a hot wallet. Your keys are stored locally on your device or browser. For large holdings, consider pairing with a hardware wallet. Never share your seed phrase with anyone.

Common scam patterns targeting UniSat Wallet users

  • Fake browser extension clones with a near-identical name or icon, distributed through search ads.
  • Phishing websites mimicking unisat.io with a typo or subdomain.
  • Social media accounts impersonating UniSat Wallet support and requesting seed phrases.
  • Modified installers distributed on file-sharing sites or Telegram channels claiming to offer an "early version".

Pre-install security checklist

  • Verify you are on the correct official domain: unisat.io
  • Compare SHA-256 hash of your download against the values on this page before running anything.
  • Check that the version number matches the latest release listed here (v1.4.5).
  • Never enter your seed phrase anywhere except the wallet application itself.
  • For significant holdings, use a hardware wallet for signing instead of a hot wallet.