Honestly, I spent a long time choosing where to store USDT, and I realized there's a reason for that. Stablecoins are, of course, convenient for trading — one USDT equals one dollar, so you don't worry about wild volatility. But where to keep it is a different question.



I tried several options. If you take security seriously, hardware wallets like Ledger Nano S or Trezor Model T are really what you need. They are offline, hackers can't reach them. But if you need mobility, Trust Wallet or Exodus are better — you can trade quickly, and the interface is simple.

For those who monitor rates like USDT to EGP or just want to exchange different assets, multi-currency wallets like Atomic Wallet or Coinomi are more convenient — you can exchange directly there. MyEtherWallet is also good if you're into Ethereum and ERC-20 tokens.

The main thing is to download only from official sources and not be lazy to check the reputation. Phishing in crypto is common. And yes, always keep your private keys secure — they are your real money.
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