What's the difference between a wallet and an account?
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Across this support page, we refer to your wallet and account(s) as separate items.
The distinction is not immediately clear, but is important for understanding how MetaMask works, its structure, and what you can and can't do with wallets and accounts.
tl;drโ
'Wallet' describes the MetaMask software you're using. 'Account' refers to a public-private key pair.
Your wallet doesn't have an address; an account within it does. Instead, a MetaMask wallet is a software tool that allows you to manage and access accounts.
You can derive more than one account from a Secret Recovery Phrase (seed phrase).
What is a wallet?โ
A wallet is a client (a piece of software) with which you manage your accounts.
The confusion around web3 wallets often stems from the term itself and how it relates to our non-technological, everyday-life understanding of it. A physical wallet holds cash and cards; in web3, your wallet does not contain your assets โ your accounts do.
Instead, we should imagine MetaMask and other wallet software as the kind of real-world, physical 'wallet' that holds an ID card or passport. The wallet itself is simply a tool for transporting around a means of proving your identity. MetaMask, accordingly, is principally a tool for proving your identity in web3. This is why we sometimes refer to MetaMask as a decentralized identity management tool: it's a way of signing transactions and messages to demonstrate that you are the holder of the private keys of your account(s).