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)
$0.006705
$0.006705$0.006705
-0.38%
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

CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon

CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon

The post CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal highlighted Polygon’s lead in global bonds, Spiko US T-Bill, and Spiko Euro T-Bill. Polygon published an X post to share that its roadmap to GigaGas was still scaling. Sentiments around POL price were last seen to be bearish. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal shared key pointers from the Dune and RWA.xyz report. These pertain to highlights about RWA on Polygon. Simultaneously, Polygon underlined its roadmap towards GigaGas. Sentiments around POL price were last seen fumbling under bearish emotions. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal on Polygon RWA CEO Sandeep Nailwal highlighted three key points from the Dune and RWA.xyz report. The Chief Executive of Polygon maintained that Polygon PoS was hosting RWA TVL worth $1.13 billion across 269 assets plus 2,900 holders. Nailwal confirmed from the report that RWA was happening on Polygon. The Dune and https://t.co/W6WSFlHoQF report on RWA is out and it shows that RWA is happening on Polygon. Here are a few highlights: – Leading in Global Bonds: Polygon holds 62% share of tokenized global bonds (driven by Spiko’s euro MMF and Cashlink euro issues) – Spiko U.S.… — Sandeep | CEO, Polygon Foundation (※,※) (@sandeepnailwal) September 17, 2025 The X post published by Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal underlined that the ecosystem was leading in global bonds by holding a 62% share of tokenized global bonds. He further highlighted that Polygon was leading with Spiko US T-Bill at approximately 29% share of TVL along with Ethereum, adding that the ecosystem had more than 50% share in the number of holders. Finally, Sandeep highlighted from the report that there was a strong adoption for Spiko Euro T-Bill with 38% share of TVL. He added that 68% of returns were on Polygon across all the chains. Polygon Roadmap to GigaGas In a different update from Polygon, the community…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:10
SHIB Price Analysis for February 8

SHIB Price Analysis for February 8

The post SHIB Price Analysis for February 8 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Original U.Today article Can traders expect SHIB to test the $0.0000070 range soon
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/09 00:26
Solana’s Long-Term Upside Tied to Upgrades, Short-Term Structure Still Weak

Solana’s Long-Term Upside Tied to Upgrades, Short-Term Structure Still Weak

Solana remains caught between strong long-term fundamentals and a fragile short-term technical structure. While the network’s upgrade roadmap points to meaningful
Share
Coinstats2026/02/09 00:28