Just recently, Ledger has integrated the 1inch Swap API into the Ledger Wallet app, giving hardware wallet users access to intent-based swaps with liquidity aggregation, gasless execution for eligible transactions, and full clear signing throughout. The integration means Ledger users can now swap at competitive rates without leaving the wallet interface and without blind signing transactions in the process.
Ledger x 1inch: Solving Blind Signing Problem
Blind signing has been one of the more persistent and underappreciated risks in crypto. When a user blind signs a transaction, they approve a string of data they cannot read or verify. The wallet shows a confirmation prompt.
The user has no meaningful way to know what they are actually approving. One malicious or misconfigured interaction is enough to drain a wallet entirely.
Ledger CTO Charles Guillemet made the problem plain at EthCC in Brussels, where he showcased the upgraded swap experience. “Blind signing a crypto transaction is like signing a blank cheque,” he said. “It only takes one mistake to get drained.”
The Clear Signing feature that now underpins the 1inch integration shows users the full details of every transaction before they sign, including what is being swapped, at what rate, and what the gas cost is. The hardware-secured signing that Ledger is known for now comes with readable transaction data attached.
What the 1inch Integration Actually Adds
The 1inch Swap API brings liquidity aggregation across multiple sources to find the best available rate at the time of the swap. For Ledger users who previously had to leave the wallet app, navigate to a separate DEX or aggregator, connect their hardware device, and then blind sign whatever transaction came back, that workflow is now considerably simpler.
Intent-based swaps handle execution routing automatically, which removes the need for users to manage slippage parameters or worry about transaction sequencing. Gasless execution is available for eligible transactions, reducing the friction of needing exact gas token balances before a swap can go through.
The combination of rate optimization, simplified execution, and hardware-level security in a single interface is the practical outcome of what the integration delivers.
Guillemet framed the broader significance at EthCC: “Moving to a future where every user can safely clear-sign a transaction is imperative, and requires cooperation throughout the ecosystem. We were delighted to work with 1inch on ensuring 1inch support for Ledger signers, making signing transactions on Ethereum safe and easier.”
Why This Integration Matters Beyond Convenience
There is a version of this story that is purely about user experience, and that version is true as far as it goes. Swapping inside the Ledger Wallet app is easier now than it was before. But the more important part is what it signals about how hardware wallet security and DeFi usability can coexist.
The common tension in crypto security is that the tools which keep assets safe tend to add friction, and users under friction tend to take shortcuts. Those shortcuts, whether moving funds to a hot wallet for easier trading or blind signing because the alternative takes too long, are where most losses actually happen. An integration that brings competitive swap rates and gasless execution to a hardware-secured environment with clear signing removes a specific set of shortcuts that users otherwise feel pressure to take.
Future Outlook
The 1inch and Ledger partnership is an example of what Guillemet described as ecosystem cooperation on the path to universal clear signing. It requires the swap protocol, the wallet, and the hardware layer to coordinate rather than operate independently. That coordination produced a tangible security improvement for a user base that is, by definition, the segment of crypto users who already care enough about security to buy a hardware wallet.
For that group, the integration is a straightforward upgrade. Better rates, simpler execution, no blind signing, and no reason to leave the hardware wallet to get any of it. The risk profile of swapping on Ethereum just got smaller for Ledger users, and that is a more meaningful outcome than the convenience story alone suggests.
Source: https://blockchainreporter.net/ledger-integrates-1inch-swap-api-to-bring-intent-based-swaps-to-hardware-wallet-users/



