A Bitcoin wallet address is the public destination you use to receive BTC. You can think of it as the receiving side of your wallet: it is the information you share when someone wants to send you Bitcoin. It is safe to share a wallet address, but it is not the same thing as a private key, seed phrase, or any other secret recovery credential.
Bitcoin wallet address format quick check:
bc1q… (native SegWit) and bc1p… (Taproot) are common modern formats.- You may also see addresses starting with
1… or 3… (older formats). - If you see something like
lnbc…, that is a Lightning invoice, not an on-chain Bitcoin wallet address.
What is a Bitcoin wallet address?
A Bitcoin wallet address is a string of letters and numbers generated by your wallet for receiving Bitcoin on the Bitcoin network. When someone sends BTC to that address, the transaction is recorded on the blockchain and your wallet shows the funds once they are confirmed.
How to get a BTC wallet address
Most wallets create a BTC wallet address automatically during setup. Once your wallet is ready, open it, select Bitcoin, and tap Receive to display an address and QR code.
How to find your Bitcoin wallet address
To find your Bitcoin wallet address, open your wallet, go to the Bitcoin account, and tap Receive. You should see both a text address you can copy and a QR code you can scan. Before sharing it, make sure you are on the Bitcoin network and not looking at another asset or a Lightning invoice.
Why your wallet address may change
Many wallets generate a fresh receiving address from time to time, and that is normal. This can improve privacy by making it harder for outside observers to link multiple payments to the same address. In many wallets, older addresses may still work, but using a new address when your wallet suggests one is usually the better habit.
Wallet address vs. private key vs. seed phrase vs. wallet identifier
A wallet address is public and meant for receiving Bitcoin. A private key is secret and is what gives spending control over the BTC linked to your wallet. A seed phrase is the backup that can restore the wallet if you lose access to your device. A wallet identifier, where a service uses one, is usually an internal account reference and should not be confused with a Bitcoin receiving address.
Example: Some exchanges and apps show an internal “wallet ID,” username, or account reference for tracking or internal transfers. That is not what you paste into a send screen. If someone is sending you BTC, share the address from your wallet’s Receive screen (or share a Lightning invoice if you’re receiving over Lightning).
The simple rule is this: you can share a wallet address, but you should never share your private key or seed phrase.