Trust Wallet launched the Trust Wallet Agent Kit (TWAK) on March 26, 2026, giving AI agents the ability to execute real crypto transactions, including DCA automation and limit orders, across more than 25 blockchains under user-defined rules.
The toolkit represents a shift from AI chatbots that only provide information to AI agents that can act on crypto strategies autonomously. TWT traded at $0.398 with a market cap of roughly $166 million at the time of writing, down 0.4% over 24 hours on volume of $7.76 million.
The launch comes amid an Extreme Fear environment in the broader crypto market, with the Fear & Greed Index sitting at 16.
What TWAK launched and why it matters
Trust Wallet described TWAK as infrastructure that lets AI agents execute real crypto transactions across more than 25 blockchains within rules that users define and control. The company said developers can get a working agent running in under 15 minutes.
At launch, TWAK supports DCA automations, limit orders, swaps, token risk scoring, price alerts, and portfolio monitoring. The toolkit positions Trust Wallet as a bridge between AI capabilities and on-chain execution, rather than offering a simple chatbot layer.
According to the official announcement, Trust Wallet claims the toolkit offers the broadest chain coverage of any AI-connected wallet infrastructure available today, though this competitive claim has not been independently benchmarked against all rivals. The company also outlined plans for an Agent Marketplace later in 2026, according to its forward-looking roadmap, where developers could publish reusable strategies inside the wallet.
How DCA automation and limit orders work inside TWAK
TWAK’s agent wallet mode allows developers to configure rules up front so that an AI agent can run automations such as DCA strategies, limit orders, recurring buys, and price-triggered execution without requiring per-transaction approval.
This means a user could set up an agent to buy a fixed dollar amount of a token at regular intervals, or to execute a swap when a token hits a specific price target. The agent operates within the boundaries the user defines, handling the timing and execution automatically.
The practical use cases extend beyond simple buy-and-hold strategies. Recurring buys, price-triggered execution, and portfolio rebalancing can all be automated through agent wallet mode, reducing the need for manual monitoring in volatile market conditions.
What self-custody safeguards and approval flows still apply
Not all TWAK interactions are fully autonomous. In WalletConnect mode, the AI agent connects to an existing Trust Wallet, proposes transactions, and the user must explicitly review and approve each one before execution. This preserves the self-custody model that crypto wallet users expect.
Trust Wallet’s developer supplemental terms place responsibility for end-user authorization, guardrails, spending limits, and compliance squarely on the AI-agent builders. If an agent provides investment recommendations or trading signals, the developer, not Trust Wallet, bears the regulatory burden.
The platform remains non-custodial throughout both modes. Trust Wallet’s terms explicitly state that developers must not cause the platform to take custody of end-user keys or funds. Builders must also handle sanctions screening and any financial-promotion compliance requirements in their jurisdictions.
The two-mode architecture creates a clear spectrum: agent wallet mode prioritizes automation speed for developers building strategy tools, while WalletConnect mode prioritizes user control for those who want AI assistance without surrendering transaction approval.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
