Coin info
Rank
Market Cap
Volume (24h)
Circulating Supply
Total Supply
Do you think the price will rise or fall?
Rise 40%
Fall 60%
Price perfomance
Depth of Market
Depth +2%
Depth -2%


PRICE
+8.47%
$0.1660

PRICE
+6.66%
$77.7
PRICE
+6.14%
$0.03388

PRICE
+4.08%
$3.33

PRICE
+3.49%
$0.04023
PRICE
+3.25%
$0.01087

PRICE
+2.67%
$0.6781

PRICE
+2.39%
$0.1135

PRICE
+2.07%
$2.09

PRICE
+1.83%
$0.06757

PRICE
+1.34%
$10.16

PRICE
+1.31%
$0.3538

PRICE
+0.98%
$39.83

PRICE
+0.83%
$0.09284

PRICE
+0.65%
$1.44
PRICE
+0.45%
$671.63

PRICE
+0.40%
$0.052

PRICE
+0.39%
$4,695.54

PRICE
+0.29%
$4,670.82

PRICE
+0.13%
$0.6695

PRICE
+0.06%
$7.29

PRICE
+0.06%
$1.01

PRICE
+0.04%
$0.007522

PRICE
+0.04%
$433.65

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9998

VOL24
+1,856.58%
$1.14

VOL24
+621.38%
$0.5455

VOL24
+182.52%
$0.9998

VOL24
+156.39%
$2,777.02

VOL24
+152.23%
$0.9997

VOL24
+122.52%
$0.9992

VOL24
+116.14%
$1.01
VOL24
+114.83%
$0.01087

VOL24
+110.29%
$0.9996

VOL24
+70.76%
$0.052

VOL24
+59.24%
$0.9998

VOL24
+55.32%
$0.03246

VOL24
+52.18%
$77.7

VOL24
+49.57%
$0.007522

VOL24
+40.79%
$0.9990

VOL24
+40.76%
$0.056

VOL24
+34.32%
$0.6781

VOL24
+29.74%
$0.1135

VOL24
+27.91%
$0.07240

VOL24
+27.35%
$90.81

VOL24
+23.58%
$0.9997

VOL24
+23.41%
$0.9981

VOL24
+22.99%
$79,322.42

VOL24
+21.1%
$0.001869

VOL24
+19.75%
$2.09

PRICE
+8.47%
$0.1660

PRICE
+6.66%
$77.7
PRICE
+6.14%
$0.03388

PRICE
+4.08%
$3.33

PRICE
+3.49%
$0.04023
PRICE
+3.25%
$0.01087

PRICE
+2.67%
$0.6781

PRICE
+2.39%
$0.1135

PRICE
+2.07%
$2.09

PRICE
+1.83%
$0.06757

PRICE
+1.34%
$10.16

PRICE
+1.31%
$0.3538

PRICE
+0.98%
$39.83

PRICE
+0.83%
$0.09284

PRICE
+0.65%
$1.44
PRICE
+0.45%
$671.63

PRICE
+0.40%
$0.052

PRICE
+0.39%
$4,695.54

PRICE
+0.29%
$4,670.82

PRICE
+0.13%
$0.6695

PRICE
+0.06%
$7.29

PRICE
+0.06%
$1.01

PRICE
+0.04%
$0.007522

PRICE
+0.04%
$433.65

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9998

VOL24
+1,856.58%
$1.14

VOL24
+621.38%
$0.5455

VOL24
+182.52%
$0.9998

VOL24
+156.39%
$2,777.02

VOL24
+152.23%
$0.9997

VOL24
+122.52%
$0.9992

VOL24
+116.14%
$1.01
VOL24
+114.83%
$0.01087

VOL24
+110.29%
$0.9996

VOL24
+70.76%
$0.052

VOL24
+59.24%
$0.9998

VOL24
+55.32%
$0.03246

VOL24
+52.18%
$77.7

VOL24
+49.57%
$0.007522

VOL24
+40.79%
$0.9990

VOL24
+40.76%
$0.056

VOL24
+34.32%
$0.6781

VOL24
+29.74%
$0.1135

VOL24
+27.91%
$0.07240

VOL24
+27.35%
$90.81

VOL24
+23.58%
$0.9997

VOL24
+23.41%
$0.9981

VOL24
+22.99%
$79,322.42

VOL24
+21.1%
$0.001869

VOL24
+19.75%
$2.09
Rise 40%
Fall 60%


$0.07306
#20108
$0.00
$20.68
0
0
14 May 2026, 06:33

IronWallet has added WalletConnect Pay support, letting users complete crypto payments at retail checkouts and online merchants directly from the non-custodial mobile wallet. The integration extends the app past storage, swaps, and dApp connections into payment flows. The wallet itself is non-custodial and multi-chain, with no KYC, 10,000+ supported assets, gasless stablecoin transfers, and now WalletConnect Pay integration. IronWallet appears on the official WalletConnect WalletGuide registry as a confirmed integrator. What the WalletConnect Pay Integration Does IronWallet's WalletConnect Pay integration adds a payment layer on top of the wallet's existing self-custody features. Users can now sign payment requests from merchants the same way they sign dApp connections, but with checkout-specific transaction handling built in. Three protocol-level capabilities ship with the integration: Standardized payment requests between the wallet and merchant systems, so a payment from IronWallet looks the same to any compatible merchant, regardless of which point-of-sale software they use Scope-limited transaction approvals, which restrict each payment to the exact amount and recipient on the request, with no broader wallet access granted On-device transaction signing, which keeps the user's private keys local at every step of the payment The integration also handles the network and asset layer in the background. IronWallet matches the payment request to a supported network the user has assets on, so a USDC payment routes through Ethereum when that's where the user holds their balance. How to Use IronWallet for Everyday Crypto Purchases A user can pay for everyday items with crypto inside IronWallet as smoothly as they would tap a contactless card. Setup requires one wallet install plus a stablecoin or token balance. No separate payment account, no extra credentials, no email at checkout. At a Physical Store The merchant terminal generates a QR code at checkout. The user opens IronWallet, scans the code, reviews the amount and recipient on-screen, then confirms with PIN or biometric login. Settlement runs on-chain within seconds, and the merchant terminal signals the transaction as complete. On a Merchant's Website The checkout page shows a WalletConnect Pay button alongside standard payment options. A tap opens IronWallet via deep link, the wallet displays the transaction summary, and the user approves or declines from inside the app before the page redirects to confirmation. Via a Payment Link A merchant sends a payment request through messaging or email. A tap on the link opens IronWallet with the amount and recipient already filled in. The user reviews the details and confirms or cancels with one tap. Why It Works Without Friction Stablecoin payments run without a separate gas token. A USDT or USDC transfer pulls the network fee from the stablecoin balance itself, so a merchant payment in USDC no longer requires ETH in the wallet just for fees. Private keys never leave the device during any of these flows. Every payment runs through the same seed phrase, PIN, and biometric protections that secure the wallet for storage. Gasless Transfers and Multi-Chain Coverage at the Point of Sale The integration unlocks new use cases without changing how the app works Two existing IronWallet features make the payment experience smoother than most wallets can offer at checkout: Gasless USDT and USDC transfers remove a common friction point at checkout. Most wallets require users to hold a separate native token (ETH on Ethereum, TRX on Tron) just to pay the network fee, even when sending stablecoins. IronWallet deducts the network fee from the stablecoin balance itself, so a USDC payment to a merchant only requires USDC in the wallet, not ETH on the side. Multi-chain coverage across Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, BNB Chain, and Tron removes the network-confusion problem at the point of sale. The wallet handles network selection on the user's behalf. The seed phrase, PIN, and biometric protections that secure the wallet for storage also secure it for payments. Users who already hold crypto in IronWallet now have a direct path to spend that crypto at participating merchants. Standardization Is the Next Test WalletConnect Pay, as an initiative, aims to standardize how wallets, merchants, and payment rails interact across Web3. WalletConnect itself runs as an open-source protocol that already powers 700+ wallets and 80,000+ dApps across the ecosystem. For IronWallet, the integration positions the wallet for merchant onboarding as the broader WalletConnect Pay initiative matures. Each additional wallet and merchant that joins builds network effects that benefit early integrators. Standardization also matters for users. A single payment flow that works across any compatible merchant means IronWallet users do not need to learn new steps for each new store or service that accepts crypto. Conclusion IronWallet's WalletConnect Pay integration moves the wallet from a self-custody app into a retail payment tool. The payment flow runs on the same security model that 3M+ users already rely on for storage and swaps. App Store and Google Play ratings sit above 4 stars on both platforms, and WalletConnect support has shipped inside IronWallet since the first app release. For users who already trust the wallet with their crypto, the integration extends that trust to the checkout. Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.
14 May 2026, 06:29

IronWallet is a non-custodial multi-chain crypto wallet with no KYC, 10,000+ supported assets, gasless stablecoin transfers, and WalletConnect Pay integration. The app skips three friction points that most self-custody wallets accept as standard: KYC steps that demand ID, network fees that require a separate gas token, and email registrations that link a wallet to a real-world identity. This article walks through the IronWallet features that set the app apart from the wider self-custody category in 2026. IronWallet at a Glance True self-custody anchors the IronWallet design. The app ships as a non-custodial crypto wallet, with private keys and the 12-word seed phrase generated locally on the device, and no server-side copy held by the company. The wallet appears on the official WalletConnect WalletGuide registry as a confirmed integrator. IronWallet is already trusted by over 3 million users, and the app boasts 4+ ratings across TrustPilot, the App Store, and Google Play. Here’s what some of the users are saying about IronWallet: "Not a bad wallet app, very intuitive, works in Hungary, and didn't ask for any personal information." — Elena, Trustpilot (January 2026) "It works well. My experience was good. Tech support found my transaction and showed me how to do it." — Dan, Trustpilot (January 2026) No KYC, No Email, No Personal Data New users create a wallet inside IronWallet without entering an email, phone number, government ID, passport, or any other identity field. Setup runs entirely through the app: no registration step, no third-party verification, no waiting period. That puts the app firmly in the crypto wallet without email category. Privacy works as the default state in the no KYC crypto wallet model, not a premium tier locked behind an upgrade. The privacy policy explicitly blocks Google Analytics and Apple Store analytics services from running inside the wallet environment, which prevents third-party behavior tracking that other mobile apps allow by default. Wallet activity stays unlinked from any real-world identity, so the structural risk of identity-tied data leaks drops sharply. Those choices place IronWallet firmly in the anonymous crypto wallet category. Gasless Transactions for USDT and USDC Stablecoin transfers run without a separate gas token inside IronWallet, which positions the app as a gasless stablecoin wallet for USDT and USDC, the two most-used stablecoins on-chain. Network fees come straight out of the stablecoin balance being sent, with no native gas token required. The table below summarizes how the gasless model works across the supported networks and tokens. Network Token Standard Gas Token Required Fee Deducted In Ethereum USDC ERC-20 None USDC Tron USDT TRC-20 None USDT That makes IronWallet a gasless USDT wallet on Tron and a gasless USDC wallet on Ethereum . The feature solves one of the most cited friction points in self-custody: tokens stuck in a wallet because the user lacks the native gas asset. Behind the scenes, a meta-transaction layer abstracts the gas payment. Send 100 USDC, and the small network fee comes out of the USDC balance instead of an ETH balance the user might not have. Newcomers who hold only stablecoins skip an entire setup step, and frequent stablecoin senders cut the operational overhead of always keeping a separate gas reserve. 10,000+ Assets Across Major Networks Coverage runs deep across Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, BNB Chain, Tron, Polygon, Base, and other major networks inside the multi-chain crypto wallet that IronWallet ships. Asset support includes 10,000+ digital assets across ERC-20, TRC-20, and BEP-20 token standards alongside native assets on each supported chain. Portfolio data sits as a first-class feature inside the asset management interface. Users track balances, monitor structural changes over time, and view all assets in one screen instead of juggling multiple apps per ecosystem. Built-in swaps route through third-party decentralized providers via smart contracts. Swap rates reflect current market conditions on the routing network, and IronWallet itself takes no platform fee on the swap. Built-In WalletConnect and WalletConnect Pay Built-in WalletConnect support has shipped with IronWallet since its first app release. The protocol acts as a secure bridge between the wallet and decentralized applications, payment platforms, and Web3 services. On top of standard dApp connections, the IronWallet WalletConnect Pay integration extends the protocol into actual payment flows. Users complete payments at retail checkouts and online merchants directly from the app, with transaction signing kept on the user's device throughout. Connections happen via QR code scans, deep links, or merchant payment links. Decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap, NFT marketplaces such as OpenSea, lending protocols, and DAO governance portals all connect to IronWallet without browser extensions or manual address entry. True Self-Custody with Local Key Storage A self-custody wallet model sits at the core of how IronWallet handles funds. The company never holds assets, never sees private keys, and never receives the 12-word seed phrase. Everything stays on the device. That architecture sets clear constraints on what the company can do. IronWallet cannot: Freeze a wallet or block a transaction Recover a lost seed phrase or reset a forgotten password Access user funds under any circumstance Reverse a transaction once it hits the blockchain The constraints are intentional, not gaps. Local access protection runs through a PIN code plus biometric login via Face ID or fingerprint scan. Both layers stop anyone with physical access to the device from opening the wallet without proper credentials. The trade-off applies to every genuine non-custodial wallet: the user owns operational security in full. Seed phrase backup, PIN setup, biometric login, and device hygiene all sit in the user's hands. Wallet Import from Almost Every Major Competitor Users migrating from another wallet bring their 12-word seed phrase straight into IronWallet, which accepts imports from a broad list of competing apps. Import speed is the practical advantage: asset balances and transaction history surface inside the new app within minutes of pasting the seed phrase. Supported import sources include: Primary wallets: MetaMask, Trust Wallet, Phantom, Exodus, Coinbase Wallet Hardware wallets: Ledger, Trezor, Tangem, SafePal Other software wallets: Atomic Wallet, TokenPocket, Electrum Users migrating from one wallet to another no longer need to manually transfer funds across multiple networks. The seed phrase carries the full wallet identity into IronWallet in one step. Unlimited Wallets and Multi-Platform Access Users can create an unlimited number of wallets within one IronWallet app. Common use cases include separating savings from trading funds, isolating DeFi activity from long-term holdings, and keeping business assets segregated from personal balances. All wallets sit under the same PIN and biometric login, so multi-wallet management stays coherent. Cross-platform access extends to desktop alongside the primary iOS and Android apps. The official website also provides free utility tools, including a fee calculator and a wallet balance checker. Zero Fees and 24/7 Human Support Platform-level transaction fees stay at zero inside IronWallet. Users pay only standard blockchain network fees, with the gasless stablecoin model removing even that cost for USDT and USDC transfers. Built-in swaps carry no platform fee either; only the third-party smart contract fee applies. 24/7 customer support comes bundled at no cost. Live human support runs through the in-app settings menu, with the team specifically focused on human interaction instead of automated scripts. Other decentralized tools leave users to fend for themselves; IronWallet treats support as part of the product. Conclusion IronWallet crypto earns attention by removing three friction points that most wallets accept as standard: KYC verification, gas-token requirements for stablecoin transfers, and email-linked accounts. Add multi-chain coverage across 10,000+ assets, WalletConnect Pay integration, broad wallet import compatibility, and 24/7 human support, and the result is a self-custody app built for users who want full ownership without setup complexity. Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.
13 May 2026, 22:30

Blockchain analytics firm Arkham has built a public, searchable map of crypto wallets it links to Iran’s central bank — a move that puts Tehran’s alleged digital holdings in plain sight of investigators and anyone else curious enough to look. How Iran Moves Money Through Crypto The map centers on two Tron-based wallets that were added to the US Treasury’s Specially Designated Nationals list on April 24. Treasury identified both addresses as property of Bank Markazi Jomhouri Islami Iran — the country’s central bank — citing ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force and Hezbollah. Around $344 million in crypto was frozen as part of the action, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said, describing the goal as cutting off Tehran’s ability to generate, move, and bring home funds. Stablecoin issuer Tether confirmed it had frozen the funds at the request of US authorities, citing activity tied to unlawful conduct, without naming Iran directly in its public statement. Arkham published its research on May 11, grouping the sanctioned addresses under a Central Bank of Iran entity page that it says can be used as a starting point to trace connected wallets and transaction flows. The firm said the wallets hold TRC-20 tokens — a token standard that runs on the Tron network and includes USDT, the world’s largest stablecoin. A Layered System Built To Hide The money trail is not simple. According to Chainalysis, Iranian oil revenues passed through brokers, intermediary wallets, cross-chain bridges, and decentralized finance protocols before ending up in accounts linked to Iran’s central bank and IRGC-connected entities. The pipeline was built for concealment, layered step by step to obscure its origins. A TRON spokesperson said the network itself cannot monitor or block individual transactions, but pointed to the T3 Financial Crime Unit — a joint effort between TRON, Tether, and TRM Labs launched in 2024 — as its main tool for flagging abuse. The unit works with law enforcement to freeze hundreds of millions in funds tied to sanctioned groups and terrorism financing, the spokesperson said. Tether declined to comment separately. Iran’s Crypto Activity Runs Deep The exposed wallets are just one piece of a much larger picture. Based on estimates from TRM Labs and Chainalysis, Iran’s total crypto transaction volume reached roughly $11.4 billion in 2024 and $10 billion in 2025. Meanwhile, Iran is said to be looking into charging crypto-denominated tolls to ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz — a sign that digital assets are being considered as a revenue channel well beyond sanctions evasion. Featured image from Bitcoin Policy Institute , chart from TradingView
13 May 2026, 18:22

🚨 Farage under formal inquiry for not declaring £5M in $USDT crypto donations. The donation came weeks before his official candidacy and support was not disclosed after entering Parliament. ⚡ Critical data: New rules in the UK have banned all crypto donations to political parties. Continue Reading: Farage faces probe over undeclared £5M crypto donation The post Farage faces probe over undeclared £5M crypto donation appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .