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Coinomi Wallet icon

Coinomi Wallet

Misc
4.7(140 votes)

macOS

Updated: Jun 17, 2026

Coinomi Wallet is a multi-chain cryptocurrency wallet for Mac that lets you hold, swap, and receive hundreds of digital assets from a single, non-custodial application.

What is Coinomi Wallet?

Coinomi is a non-custodial desktop (and mobile) wallet that has been running in production since 2014 — one of the longest-lived multi-asset wallets in the industry. Unlike exchange-based wallets, Coinomi never holds your keys; your seed phrase stays on your device, giving you true ownership of every coin in your portfolio. That single property has kept it relevant through bear markets, exchange collapses, and the broader crypto chaos of the past decade.

The Mac app is a native download that connects to each blockchain's own network directly, without routing funds through Coinomi's servers. Whether you're holding Bitcoin, Ethereum, a fistful of ERC-20 tokens, or something more obscure on a minor L1 chain, the app consolidates your view into one interface.

What does Coinomi do best?

Breadth of asset support is Coinomi's clearest strength. It covers well over 1,700 assets across dozens of chains — including chains that other popular wallets simply don't support yet. For anyone holding a diverse portfolio that goes beyond the top ten coins, that matters enormously.

The built-in exchange feature (powered by partners like Changelly and others) lets you swap between assets without leaving the app. I've used it to convert a stranded altcoin into something more liquid while travelling, and the process took under three minutes start to finish. Fees are disclosed upfront, which I appreciate more than I used to — some competing swap interfaces bury the spread.

  • Non-custodial by default: 12- or 24-word seed phrase; you export it once and Coinomi never sees it again.
  • Multi-wallet support: create separate wallets inside the same app, useful if you keep a hot wallet for daily spending and a cold-ish wallet for longer holds.
  • IP masking for transaction broadcast: requests are routed through Coinomi's servers to prevent blockchain nodes from logging your real IP address — a small but meaningful privacy layer absent from wallets like Exodus on default settings.
  • Wide chain coverage: Ethereum, BNB Chain, Solana, Polygon, Tron, Litecoin, Dogecoin, and dozens more are all first-class citizens.

Is Coinomi free?

Yes — the Coinomi app itself is free to download and use. You pay no subscription fee, no monthly charge, and no unlock cost for any of the supported chains. The only fees you pay are standard network transaction fees (gas, miner fees, etc.) and any spread built into the in-app swap partners' rates. There is no "premium" tier gating features behind a paywall, which puts it ahead of wallets that charge for multi-chain access or hardware sync.

Who should use Coinomi Wallet?

Coinomi suits crypto users who hold assets across multiple chains and are tired of juggling four or five separate wallets. If your portfolio is 100% Bitcoin or 100% Ethereum, a specialist wallet — Sparrow Wallet for BTC purists, or MetaMask for the EVM ecosystem — will give you deeper protocol features. But the moment you need to manage assets on chains that MetaMask doesn't natively support, Coinomi's breadth pays for itself.

It also works well as a secondary hot wallet alongside a hardware device like a Ledger or Trezor — use Coinomi for small amounts you're actively trading or receiving, and keep your major holdings on hardware. The app is approachable enough that intermediate users won't feel lost, yet it doesn't dumb things down to the point of hiding useful settings.

What are the best Coinomi Wallet alternatives?

The multi-chain wallet space has matured considerably. Exodus is the most direct competitor on Mac — polished UI, strong asset support, but closed-source and its swap spreads run high. Trust Wallet (primarily mobile, desktop in beta) covers similar breadth. For Bitcoin-only users, Sparrow Wallet is the gold standard — PSBT support, coin control, full node connection. For EVM chains specifically, MetaMask (browser extension) remains the default, though its Mac desktop story is browser-dependent. If hardware wallet pairing matters most, Ledger Live is purpose-built for that workflow but falls short on non-Ledger-supported coins.

Coinomi sits between Exodus and the hardware-wallet managers: broader than Ledger Live's native list, more privacy-conscious than Exodus, and more multi-chain than MetaMask — but lacking the open-source auditability that Bitcoin maximalists demand.

How does Coinomi compare to Exodus?

Both are multi-chain hot wallets with built-in swap functionality, but they differ in a few meaningful ways. Coinomi's IP masking on transaction broadcast is a privacy advantage Exodus doesn't offer by default. Exodus has a more polished, animated UI and tighter Trezor hardware wallet integration. Coinomi supports more chains out of the box. Neither wallet is open-source — if that's a dealbreaker, you're looking at a different product category entirely. For most multi-chain holders, the choice comes down to aesthetics (Exodus wins) versus breadth and privacy defaults (Coinomi wins).

Software Information

Software Name
Coinomi Wallet
Version
Latest
Developer
Category
Misc
OS Compatibility
macOS
Architecture
Apple Silicon & Intel (Universal)
License
Shareware
Language
English
File Size
Last Updated
Jun 17, 2026