Photo by Shubham Dhage on Unsplash Ethereum doesn’t greet you with a “Sign up with email” screen. To use it, you go through wallets, and every aPhoto by Shubham Dhage on Unsplash Ethereum doesn’t greet you with a “Sign up with email” screen. To use it, you go through wallets, and every a

Ethereum Wallets and Gas (for Non‑Technical People)

2025/12/09 16:43
4 min read

Photo by Shubham Dhage on Unsplash

Ethereum doesn’t greet you with a “Sign up with email” screen. To use it, you go through wallets, and every action you take costs a small fee called gas. Day 7 is about understanding both in human language, not protocol diagrams.

What is an Ethereum wallet?

An Ethereum wallet is an app, browser extension, or hardware device that lets you create accounts, hold assets like ETH and tokens, and interact with dApps. Under the hood, it manages your cryptographic keys and signs transactions on your behalf.

Two core ideas sit behind that UI:

  • A public address — something you can safely share so people or apps can send you assets (like an account number).
  • A private key or seed phrase — a secret that controls the account; anyone who has it can move everything in that wallet.

Non‑custodial wallets (MetaMask, many mobile wallets) give you direct control of keys; custodial wallets (some exchanges) hold keys for you and show you balances in an account view.

What does a wallet actually do?

When you “use Ethereum”, the wallet is doing more than just displaying numbers. It:

  • Shows you what a transaction or contract call is about to do: send ETH, approve a token spend, mint an NFT, stake in a protocol, etc.
  • Asks you to confirm or reject that action.
  • Signs the transaction with your private key and broadcasts it to the network so validators can include it in a block.

So each wallet popup is effectively asking: “Do you really want this change recorded on‑chain, at this cost?”

What is gas on Ethereum?

On Ethereum, gas is the fee you pay to get the network to process your transaction or smart‑contract interaction. Validators use computing power and storage to execute your transaction; gas fees compensate them and prevent spam.

Every on‑chain action has:

  • A certain amount of work required (measured in gas units).
  • A price per unit of gas (in gwei, a tiny fraction of ETH) that changes depending on how busy the network is.

Your total fee is roughly:

gas used × gas price, paid in ETH.

Why do gas fees spike?

Ethereum has limited transaction capacity per block, so when lots of people want to transact at once, they bid up gas prices for faster inclusion. It’s a bit like surge pricing for block space.

In practice, that means:

  • Simple transfers (sending ETH from you to a friend) usually consume less gas than complex DeFi or NFT interactions that touch multiple contracts.
  • Time of day and network conditions matter; wallets and explorers often show estimated fees or let you choose between “slow / medium / fast” options with different prices.

As a user, you don’t set gas mechanics from scratch — you mostly choose how much you’re willing to pay for speed.

How wallets and gas feel in a real dApp session

A typical dApp interaction looks like:

  • Connect wallet — you give the site permission to see your public address and suggest transactions; this step usually doesn’t cost gas.
  • Approve a token — you authorize a smart contract to spend a specific token on your behalf (for example, so a DEX can swap it). This is an on‑chain transaction and costs gas.
  • Do the main action — swap, lend, stake, mint, etc. Each of these is another transaction with its own gas fee.

To a newcomer, that’s the confusing bit: clicking a single button in a dApp might correspond to one or more real blockchain transactions, each with a visible cost in ETH.


Ethereum Wallets and Gas (for Non‑Technical People) was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Market Opportunity
ConstitutionDAO Logo
ConstitutionDAO Price(PEOPLE)
$0.006726
$0.006726$0.006726
-1.60%
USD
ConstitutionDAO (PEOPLE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

XRP Confirms Downtrend After $1.50 Breakdown, with $1.15 in Focus

XRP Confirms Downtrend After $1.50 Breakdown, with $1.15 in Focus

XRP price is currently trading near $1.44 on Sunday, February 8, after dipping to $1.21 earlier in the week. The price has been declining from its high near $1.
Share
Tronweekly2026/02/08 21:17
Will Bitcoin Crash Again After Trump Insider Whale Dumps 6,599 BTC?

Will Bitcoin Crash Again After Trump Insider Whale Dumps 6,599 BTC?

Trump insider Garrett Jin moves 6,599 BTC to Binance, raising concerns about more Bitcoin sell pressure as market sentiment weakens. Bitcoin has seen a turbulent
Share
LiveBitcoinNews2026/02/08 21:30
China’s Ban on Nvidia Chips for State Firms Sends Stock Tumbling

China’s Ban on Nvidia Chips for State Firms Sends Stock Tumbling

The post China’s Ban on Nvidia Chips for State Firms Sends Stock Tumbling appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has instructed big companies to stop purchasing and cancel existing orders for Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D chip The ban is part of China’s ongoing effort to reduce dependency on US-made AI hardware, especially after restrictive US export rules After the news, Nvidia shares dropped in premarket trading by about 1.5% Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has instructed big companies like Alibaba and ByteDance to stop purchasing and cancel existing orders for Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D chip. The ban is part of China’s ongoing effort to reduce dependency on US-made AI hardware, especially after restrictive US export rules. The RTX Pro 6000D was tailored for China to comply with some export rules, but now the regulator says even that chip is off-limits. After the news, Nvidia shares dropped in premarket trading (around 1.5%), reflecting investors’ concerns about reduced demand in one of the biggest markets. This isn’t the first time China has done something like this. For instance, in August, the country urged firms not to use Nvidia’s H20 chip due to potential security issues and the need to comply with international export control regulations. Meanwhile, Alibaba and Baidu have begun using domestically produced AI chips more heavily, which shows that China is seriously investing in building its own chip-making capacity. Additionally, a few days ago, Chinese regulators opened an antitrust review into Nvidia’s Mellanox acquisition, suggesting the company may have broken some of the promises it made to get the 2020 deal passed. From AI to blockchain and the possible effects of China’s ban The banning of Nvidia chips represents a rather notable escalation in the technological rivalry between the United States and China. Beyond tariffs or export bans, China is now proactively telling its firms to avoid even “compliant” US chips and instead shift…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:46