Market Cap: $2.2046T 0.15%
Volume(24h): $85.7445B 58.50%
Fear & Greed Index:

29 - Fear

  • Market Cap: $2.2046T 0.15%
  • Volume(24h): $85.7445B 58.50%
  • Fear & Greed Index:
  • Market Cap: $2.2046T 0.15%
Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos
Top Cryptospedia

Select Language

Select Language

Select Currency

Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos

How to create a Smart Wallet on Coinbase? (Account abstraction)

Coinbase’s smart wallet on Base uses ERC-4337 account abstraction to enable gas sponsorship, social recovery, batched transactions, and session keys—without exposing private keys or requiring ETH for every operation.

Mar 28, 2026 at 07:20 pm

Understanding Account Abstraction on Coinbase

1. Account abstraction shifts wallet control from externally owned accounts (EOAs) to smart contracts, enabling programmable security and user experience enhancements.

2. Coinbase has integrated account abstraction into its wallet infrastructure through the Base blockchain, leveraging ERC-4337 standards for bundling and paymaster support.

3. This architecture allows users to sponsor gas fees, recover lost access, and execute batched transactions without requiring native ETH for every operation.

4. The underlying mechanism relies on a UserOperation mempool, where off-chain bundlers validate and submit operations to the chain via EntryPoint contracts.

5. Coinbase does not expose raw contract deployment interfaces to end users; instead, it delivers abstraction through seamless wallet initialization in its mobile and web apps.

Setting Up a Smart Wallet via Coinbase Wallet App

1. Download the official Coinbase Wallet application from the iOS App Store or Google Play Store—ensure it is version 24.0 or higher to access account abstraction features.

2. Launch the app and select “Create a new wallet” rather than importing an existing seed phrase, as smart wallets require on-chain contract deployment.

3. During onboarding, the app automatically detects device capability and network compatibility, then initiates deployment of a personalized ERC-4337-compatible wallet contract on Base.

4. A one-time gas fee—paid in USDC or ETH—is required to deploy the wallet contract; Coinbase subsidizes part of this cost using its integrated paymaster service.

5. After deployment completes, the wallet address displayed is a contract account—not an EOA—with built-in session key management and social recovery options configured by default.

Key Features Enabled by Coinbase’s Smart Wallet

1. Gas sponsorship allows dApp developers or third parties to cover transaction fees, removing friction for new users unfamiliar with native token requirements.

2. Multi-factor recovery uses decentralized identifiers (DIDs) anchored to email, phone number, or hardware keys—no centralized custodial backup is involved.

3. Batched execution permits signing a single approval for multiple actions, such as approving a token and swapping it in one atomic flow.

4. Session key delegation lets users grant time-bound, scope-limited access to specific dApps without exposing private keys or main wallet permissions.

5. Native integration with Base’s sequencer enables near-instant finality for wallet-initiated operations, reducing perceived latency during interactions with DeFi protocols.

Security Considerations and Limitations

1. Smart wallet logic resides in immutable on-chain contracts; once deployed, core validation rules cannot be altered, though modular plugins may be upgraded via governance-approved modules.

2. Paymaster reliance introduces trust assumptions—if Coinbase’s sponsored paymaster goes offline, users must hold USDC or ETH to transact unless alternative paymasters are configured manually.

3. Transaction simulation before signing is supported within the app interface, but users remain responsible for verifying payload contents, especially when interacting with unverified third-party contracts.

4. Recovery mechanisms depend on attestation services that require internet connectivity and cooperation from at least two designated guardians; air-gapped recovery is not supported.

5. The wallet currently operates only on Base mainnet and does not support cross-chain account abstraction natively—bridging requires separate contract deployments on other chains.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I import my existing mnemonic into a Coinbase Smart Wallet?A: No. Smart wallets generated through Coinbase Wallet are contract-based and do not derive from BIP-39 seed phrases. Importing EOAs retains traditional wallet behavior without abstraction features.

Q: Does Coinbase store my private keys for the smart wallet?A: Coinbase does not hold private keys. Signing keys are stored locally on the device, and signature aggregation occurs client-side before submission to the EntryPoint contract.

Q: Why does my smart wallet address start with 0x42 instead of 0x00?A: Addresses beginning with 0x42 indicate deployment on Base, where Coinbase prefixes contract addresses using a deterministic salt derived from user-specific entropy and chain ID.

Q: Can I use hardware wallets like Ledger with Coinbase’s smart wallet?A: Not directly. Hardware signers can only interact with EOAs. However, you may use a hardware wallet to approve transactions initiated by the smart wallet via WalletConnect if the dApp supports session key signing.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

Related knowledge

See all articles

User not found or password invalid

Your input is correct