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How to check and understand your transaction history

Learn how to locate and understand your transaction history in 1inch Wallet on iOS and Android.

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Written by Valeriia Nikitina
Updated this week

Transaction history is a record of all the actions you’ve performed with your wallet—such as swaps, transfers, and cross-chain operations. Reviewing your transaction history can help you:

  • Track where your funds are going.

  • Verify whether a transaction was successful.

  • Troubleshoot issues by checking pending or failed transactions.

  • Access details through blockchain explorers for full transparency.

Where to find your transaction history

To access your transaction history, tap the clock icon in the bottom menu in 1inch Wallet. By default, it shows transactions for the first wallet in your list. If you want to see the transaction history for another wallet, tap the icon in the top-right corner and select the wallet you want from the list.

How to work with the transaction list

The transaction history lists all the transactions that occurred in your wallets in chronological order—from the latest to the oldest.

You can filter the list of transactions using the filters at the top of the page. You can set their values individually or through the unified menu by tapping the filters icon in the top-left corner of the section. The following filters are available:

  • Network—select networks where transactions were executed.

  • Period—select one of the presets or a custom time range for executed transactions.

  • Type—select one or multiple types of transactions.

  • Token—select one or multiple tokens that were involved in the transaction execution.

  • Scam—hide transactions involving known scams or unverified tokens.

Additionally, you can search directly by a token name or a token contract by using the search feature.

Understand information about a transaction

To view full information about a transaction, tap it in the list of transactions. Different types of transactions will contain different sets of data. Below, we'll take a look at all possible information that may appear across transactions, regardless of type.

Top section

The top section shows the transaction summary:

  • Transaction type, e.g., swap, send, buy, etc.

  • Date and time when the transaction was initiated.

  • Transaction status.

Token information section

  • Amount of tokens involved in the transaction, along with their approximate value in fiat $.

Execution details section

  • Fill percentage—how much of the order was executed (useful for swaps). Tap this field to see details on order fill. For cross-chain swaps, you can additionally view all steps of execution by tapping Show at the bottom of the fill pop-up.

  • Wallet—the wallet that initiated the transaction, with the address displayed.

  • From (if applicable)—the sender address, with an option to copy the address by tapping it.

  • To (if applicable)—the recipient address, with an option to copy the address by tapping it and to save it to the address book.

Technical information section

  • Smart contract—the contract that processed the transaction, with a link to open it in a block explorer.

  • Transaction hash—unique identifier of the transaction, with an option to copy.

  • Network fee—the fee paid to miners or validators, shown in both tokens and USD.

  • Nonce—the sequential number of the transaction from the wallet.

  • Executed—date and time of transaction execution.

Quick actions

Within the transaction details window, you can also perform several quick actions:

  • Open transaction in block explorer—view the transaction on the respective network explorer.

  • Interact with hash—interact with the transaction hash by performing actions available through your device's system share menu.

  • Save address—add the sender or recipient to your address book.

  • Save as template—store the transaction parameters for quick repetition in the future.


Questions, comments, concerns?

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