BitGo EVM Keyring connects multiple EVM chains to a single wallet

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Managing crypto assets across multiple blockchains has always been a bit like keeping separate bank accounts at five different banks, each with its own login, its own rules, and its own way of losing your money if you forget a password. BitGo wants to fix that.

On July 14, 2026, BitGo launched its EVM Keyring feature, a tool that connects all enabled EVM-compatible blockchains to a single unified wallet. The pitch is simple: one wallet, one set of keys, many chains.

What the EVM Keyring actually does

The EVM Keyring uses a reference Multi-Party Computation wallet to generate cryptographically identical addresses and keys across every supported network. Your wallet address on Ethereum is the same as your wallet address on Polygon, BNB Smart Chain, Arbitrum, and Optimism. No separate key ceremonies. No duplicate wallets sitting in different dashboards waiting to be mismanaged.

Currently, the feature supports five networks: Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Polygon, Arbitrum, and Optimism. Adding new networks, according to BitGo, takes just a few clicks rather than a full infrastructure overhaul.

The EVM Keyring requires MPCv2 wallets. Older multisig or earlier MPC versions are not compatible, which means some teams will need to migrate before they can take advantage of the feature.

The feature handles gas management through centralized gas tanks, funded per chain by each network’s native asset. There is also an automated token recovery mechanism built in. If assets are accidentally sent to the wrong address on a supported chain, a forwarder system handles recovery automatically.

The wallet sprawl problem BitGo is solving

BitGo’s EVM Keyring applies the same security and governance protocols uniformly across all linked chains. The underlying model is BitGo’s established MPC-based 2-of-3 structure, where user, backup, and BitGo keys are each held separately. No single party holds enough keys to move funds unilaterally.

BitGo was founded in 2013 and has spent more than a decade positioning itself as infrastructure for institutional crypto. It operates under regulated frameworks and offers custody, wallet services, and staking.

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