Ledger Adds Direct DeFi Access to Velora
Ledger has integrated Velora (formerly ParaSwap) into its direct dApp connectivity flow, giving users a native way to connect a Ledger signer to DeFi trading without browser extensions or software bridges. The company says the integration is designed to combine smoother DeFi execution with Ledger’s hardware-based security model.
The announcement, published on February 25, positions Velora as Ledger’s new DeFi access layer for swaps and routing across multiple networks, with Clear Signing support included through the direct connection.
Ledger is using Velora as a DeFi access layer
Ledger describes Velora as the next-generation version of ParaSwap, built to unify fragmented DeFi liquidity into a single interface. In the post, Ledger says Velora can split orders across multiple liquidity sources to improve pricing and reduce costs.
The company also highlights Velora’s cross-chain flow support across major networks including Ethereum, Arbitrum, Polygon, and Base, plus advanced features like limit orders and RFQ liquidity. That means Ledger is not just adding a simple swap button — it is plugging users into a more full-featured DeFi execution layer.
Direct connectivity removes the usual DeFi wallet friction
A key part of the launch is Ledger’s “one-click dApp connectivity,” which Ledger says removes the need for extra middleware and browser-extension bridges when connecting a Ledger signer to supported dApps. For Velora, users can connect directly by selecting the Ledger Wallet option and approving on-device.
Ledger frames this as fixing one of the weakest parts of the user journey: the connection step between self-custody assets and DeFi applications. In plain terms, the company is trying to make hardware-wallet DeFi usage feel less clunky without weakening custody controls.
Clear Signing is central to the security pitch
Ledger’s blog puts heavy emphasis on Clear Signing, warning that blind signing remains one of the biggest risks in DeFi. The company says the Velora integration extends Clear Signing, so users can review human-readable transaction details on the Ledger device screen before approval.
Ledger also reiterates that private keys never leave the signer. Velora handles routing and pricing online, but final authorization stays on the hardware device in an offline signing environment.
Initial rollout is desktop-first and EVM-focused
Ledger says direct dApp connectivity for Velora is initially available on desktop in Chromium-based browsers (including Chrome and Brave). It also says the feature supports all Ledger signers except the original Ledger Nano S.
The company adds that the rollout begins with EVM-compatible chains, which suggests chain support may expand later as the direct connectivity framework matures. Ledger also lists Ledger Sync as a setup requirement for desktop connection.
Why it matters for crypto
- This improves DeFi usability for hardware-wallet users without pushing them toward browser-extension custody.
- Clear Signing support on a major DeFi routing layer can reduce blind-signing risk in swaps.
- Velora’s routing and RFQ tooling brings more institutional-style execution logic into retail self-custody flows.
- Desktop-first direct connectivity shows Ledger is building a tighter app-layer ecosystem around its devices.
- EVM-first support fits where most DeFi volume still sits today.
What to watch next
- Whether Ledger expands direct dApp connectivity beyond Velora to more major DeFi apps.
- Any timeline for broader chain support beyond the initial EVM-compatible rollout.
- Whether mobile support is added after the desktop-first launch.
- Adoption metrics from Ledger or Velora on swap volume and connected users.
- Future security disclosures around Clear Signing coverage for more complex DeFi transactions.
Source: Ledger Blog