| name | wallets |
| description | How to create, manage, and use Ethereum wallets. Covers EOAs, smart contract wallets, multisig (Safe), and account abstraction. Use this skill whenever you are sending transactions, signing messages, or managing funds. Includes guardrails for safe key handling. |
Wallets on Ethereum
What You Probably Got Wrong
EIP-7702 is live. Since Pectra (May 7, 2025), regular EOAs can delegate execution to smart-contract code without migrating wallets. This enables batching, gas sponsorship, and session-key-style UX. This is NOT "coming soon." It shipped.
Account abstraction status: ERC-4337 is growing but still early (Feb 2026). Major implementations: Kernel (ZeroDev), Biconomy, Alchemy Account Kit, Pimlico. EntryPoint v0.7: 0x0000000071727De22E5E9d8BAf0edAc6f37da032.
Most secure storage: Hardware wallets alone are single points of failure. An audited multisig smart contract (e.g. Safe) is more secure. Multisig does not require multiple people; one user can control multiple keys on separate devices. In a 2-of-4 setup, three signers are the user’s wallets on separate devices (e.g., hardware wallet, phone hot wallet, laptop wallet). The fourth signer is a trusted contact for recovery. An attacker must compromise multiple devices, not one.
EIP-7702: Smart EOAs (Live Since May 2025)
EOAs can authorize delegated code execution from smart-contract code. This is not automatically "one and done" - the delegation can stay active until it is replaced or explicitly cleared.
How it works:
- The wallet signs a message that says which contract code the EOA can use.
- A special EIP-7702 transaction submits that signed message.
- The EOA can then run that contract logic (batching, sponsorship, permissions) as if it were account logic.
- This is not automatically "one and done" - the delegation can stay active until it is replaced or explicitly cleared.
- If the transaction later fails, the delegation update itself can still remain.
What this enables:
- Batch 10 token approvals into one transaction
- Gas sponsorship / meta-transactions for EOA users
- Session keys with limited permissions
- Custom authorization logic
- Eliminates "approval fatigue" (approve + execute → one step)
Status (Feb 2026): Deployed on mainnet. MetaMask, Rainbow adding support. Still early for production agents — use standard EOAs or Safe until tooling matures.
Safe (Gnosis Safe) Multisig
Key Addresses (v1.4.1, deterministic across chains)
| Contract | Address |
|---|
| Safe Singleton | 0x41675C099F32341bf84BFc5382aF534df5C7461a |
| Safe Proxy Factory | 0x4e1DCf7AD4e460CfD30791CCC4F9c8a4f820ec67 |
| MultiSend | 0x38869bf66a61cF6bDB996A6aE40D5853Fd43B526 |
Same addresses on Mainnet, Arbitrum, Base, and all major chains.
Safe for AI Agents
Pattern: 2-of-3 Safe
- Owner 1: Agent's wallet (hot, automated)
- Owner 2: Human's hot wallet (hot, manual)
- Owner 3: Human's cold wallet (cold, recovery)
- Threshold: 2 (agent can queue transactions and human can execute or vice versa)
Benefits: If agent key is compromised, human removes it. Human can always recover funds. Agent can batch transactions.
🚨 NEVER COMMIT SECRETS TO GIT
This is the #1 way AI agents lose funds and leak credentials. Bots scrape GitHub in real-time and exploit leaked secrets within seconds — even from private repos, even if deleted immediately. A secret committed to Git is compromised forever.
This happens constantly with AI coding agents. The agent generates a deploy script, hardcodes a key, runs git add ., and the wallet is drained before the next prompt. Or the agent pastes an Alchemy API key into scaffold.config.ts and it ends up in a public repo.
This applies to ALL secrets:
- Wallet private keys — funds drained instantly
- API keys — Alchemy, Infura, Etherscan, WalletConnect
- RPC URLs with embedded keys —
https://base-mainnet.g.alchemy.com/v2/YOUR_KEY
- OAuth tokens, bearer tokens, passwords
Prevention
.env
.env.*
*.key
*.pem
broadcast/
cache/
git diff --cached --name-only | grep -iE '\.env|key|secret|private'
git log --all -p | grep -iE 'private.?key|0x[a-fA-F0-9]{64}'
If You Already Committed a Key
- Assume it's compromised. Don't hope nobody saw it.
- Transfer all funds immediately to a new wallet.
- Rotate the key. Generate a new one. The old one is burned forever.
- Clean Git history with
git filter-repo or BFG Repo Cleaner — but this is damage control, not prevention. The key is already compromised.
Safe Patterns for AI Agents
cast send ... --private-key $DEPLOYER_PRIVATE_KEY
cast send ... --keystore ~/.foundry/keystores/deployer --password-file .password
cast send ... --ledger
Rule of thumb: If grep -r "0x[a-fA-F0-9]{64}" . matches anything in your source code, you have a problem. Same for grep -r "g.alchemy.com/v2/[A-Za-z0-9]" or any RPC URL with an embedded API key.
CRITICAL Guardrails for AI Agents
Key Safety Rules
- NEVER extract a private key from any wallet without explicit human permission.
- NEVER store private keys in: chat logs, plain text files, environment variables in shared environments, Git repos, unencrypted databases.
- NEVER move funds without human confirmation. Show: amount, destination (checksummed), gas cost, what it does. Wait for explicit "yes."
- Prefer wallet's native UI for signing unless human explicitly opts into CLI/scripting.
- Use a dedicated wallet with limited funds for agent operations. Never the human's main wallet.
- Double-check addresses. Use
viem.getAddress() or equivalent for checksum validation. A single wrong character = permanent loss.
- Test on testnet first. Or use local Anvil fork.
- Implement spending limits. Require human approval above threshold. Use Safe multisig for high-value operations.
- Log all transactions (never keys). Keep audit trail.
- Assume keys will be compromised. Design so a compromised agent key doesn't mean total loss.
Storage Options (Worst to Best)
❌ Plain text in code/logs — NEVER
❌ Environment variables in shared environments — NEVER
❌ Committed to Git — NEVER
⚠️ Local .env file — testing only
✅ Encrypted keystore (password-protected)
✅ Hardware wallet / Cloud KMS / TEE
Safe Transaction Pattern
async function sendSafely(publicClient, walletClient, to, value) {
const checksummedTo = viem.getAddress(to);
const { account } = walletClient;
const gas = await publicClient.estimateGas({ account, to: checksummedTo, value });
const fees = await publicClient.estimateFeesPerGas();
const totalCostUSD = Number(viem.formatEther(value + gas * fees.maxFeePerGas)) * 2000;
if (totalCostUSD > 10) {
}
const hash = await walletClient.sendTransaction({
account,
to: checksummedTo,
value,
gas: (gas * 120n) / 100n,
maxFeePerGas: fees.maxFeePerGas,
maxPriorityFeePerGas: fees.maxPriorityFeePerGas,
});
const receipt = await publicClient.waitForTransactionReceipt({ hash });
logTransaction({ hash, to: checksummedTo, value, block: receipt.blockNumber });
return receipt;
}
Further Reading