Trezor Launches Safe 7, First ‘Quantum-Ready’ Crypto Wallet with Dual Secure Chips

Trezor unveils Safe 7, its most advanced hardware wallet yet, introducing a dual Secure Element system and the world’s first transparent TROPIC01 chip for verifiable crypto protection.The device features quantum-ready architecture, encrypted Bluetooth, Qi2 wireless charging, and a LiFePO₄ long-life battery—capabilities absent in earlier Trezor models.

KeyInsights

  • Trezor announced the Safe 7, a new flagship hardware wallet with dual Secure Elements — including the auditable TROPIC01 chip — plus encrypted Bluetooth, Qi2 wireless charging and a 2.5″ Gorilla Glass touchscreen.
  • Safe 7 introduces “quantum-ready” architecture, designed to receive future quantum-secure firmware updates without requiring replacement hardware — a first in consumer crypto wallets.
  • Launch price is $249 with a free magnetic charger, shipping from Nov. 23, with full Trezor Suite integration, 70k+ dApp support, staking, open-source firmware, and an aluminum IP54 chassis.

(MarketsXplora) — Trezor on Tuesday unveiled the Trezor Safe 7, a flagship hardware wallet the company claims “redefines crypto security” with features not present in any of its previous devices, including the Safe 5, Safe 3, and Model T. The launch introduces a new secure-hardware architecture, a larger high-resolution touchscreen, wireless capabilities, and what the firm calls the industry’s first “quantum-ready” crypto wallet.

The Safe 7 is the first wallet to ship with TROPIC01 — a fully auditable Secure Element — paired with a second NDA-free EAL6+ Secure Element for dual-chip physical protection, a configuration not used in earlier Trezor devices. The chip design is positioned as “transparent by default,” allowing independent experts and the public to review how keys are protected — in contrast to legacy closed Secure Elements in older hardware wallets.

Another first for the line is quantum-ready architecture. Trezor says the Safe 7 is engineered to receive quantum-secure firmware updates, insulating owners from future threats without replacing the device — a capability not advertised on prior models.

The Safe 7 also departs from all earlier Trezor units with fully encrypted Bluetooth pairing and Qi2 wireless charging, enabled by a long-life LiFePO₄ battery rated for roughly 4× more cycles than standard lithium cells used historically. The company says the wallet can operate indefinitely over USB-C even if the battery later degrades.

Visually, the device introduces a 2.5-inch Gorilla Glass color touchscreen — 62% larger than the Safe 5 — with 520×380 resolution, 700-nit brightness and haptic feedback. The chassis moves to a premium anodized aluminum unibody with a reinforced glass back, IP54 splash and dust resistance, and arrives in Charcoal Black, Obsidian Green and Bitcoin Orange. A magnetic wireless charger ships as a free-launch gift. The device weighs 45 g and goes on sale November 23 at $249.

As with earlier generations, the Safe 7 integrates with Trezor Suite on desktop and mobile, and supports thousands of coins and tokens, access to 70,000+ dApps via WalletConnect, and 30+ third-party wallet apps including MetaMask, Backpack and Rabby. On-device functionality includes buy, sell, swap and staking, PIN protection up to 50 digits, 12/20/24-word backup options, Advanced Multi-share Backup, passphrase support, FIDO2 authentication, coin control, Tor privacy, and full open-source firmware.

Read also— Ledger Unveils Nano Gen5 Signer and Rebrands Ledger Live

Trezor says the Safe 7 meets a broad set of safety and radio standards including CE, FCC, REACH, WEEE, RCM, KC and VCCI, is x-ray safe for travel, and ships with a USB-C cable and two 20-word backup cards.

The Safe 7 is the company’s most significant departure from the design and threat model of its earlier devices — introducing dual Secure Elements, wireless operation, quantum-ready updates and a materially upgraded industrial design in one release.

A full in-depth review — including deeper analysis of the new Secure Element stack, wireless threat surface, and how the battery architecture changes long-term custody — is coming next.

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