An image of two expert happily showing Multi-Chain Assets

6 Crypto Portfolio Trackers That Support Multi-Chain Assets

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Multi-chain portfolios are fun until you try to track them.

One wallet is on Ethereum, another on Solana, an LP position on Arbitrum, and a random NFT on Polygon that you swear you will sell one day. Then tax season turns up and you realise your system is a mix of screenshots and hope.

Today’s blog is about 6 crypto portfolio trackers that support multi-chain assets, written for people who work in Web3 and want simple answers fast. You’ll see what each tracker is good at, what it misses, and the simple checks that stop you picking the wrong tool.


Quick answers – jump to section

  1. What most people want from a multi-chain tracker
  2. The 6 multi-chain crypto portfolio trackers
  3. How to pick the right tracker for your job
  4. Common problems people hit and how to fix them
  5. Final Thoughts
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

What most people want from a multi-chain tracker

People do not wake up excited to track a portfolio. They want answers fast, so they can get back to shipping.

From Reddit threads, the same needs keep showing up. People want to track LP positions, see profit and loss, group multiple wallets, and avoid paying for features that used to be free. Someone even said they stopped using DeBank because a timeline view moved behind a paywall.


The 6 multi-chain crypto portfolio trackers

An image of an expert showing 6 Crypto Portfolio Trackers That Support Multi-Chain Assets

There is no perfect tracker. Each one makes a trade-off, so the right pick depends on what you do all day.

I am sticking to tools that come up a lot in Web3 conversations about multi-chain tracking, DeFi positions, and wallet-based views.

1. DeBank

DeBank is the open-it-and-see-everything option for a lot of DeFi users. You paste an address and it pulls tokens, DeFi positions, and often NFTs across several chains.

The catch is simple. Features can move behind a paywall over time, so check pricing before you build one view into your weekly routine.

2. Zerion

Zerion feels like a tracker that also wants to be your daily dashboard. It is usually strong on multi-chain token views, DeFi positions, and a clean interface.

If your job is keeping an eye on a bunch of wallets and moving fast, Zerion tends to fit. If you also care about how users get started without dropping off, this is easier when you follow this quick way to reduce wallet setup drop-off while you review what people see on day one.

3. Zapper

Zapper is a classic for DeFi tracking, and it often comes up next to DeBank and Zerion. People like it because it helps you see positions, not just token balances.

The main thing to watch is coverage. If you live on newer chains or smaller protocols, test your exact positions first. Multi-chain can still mean gaps.

4. CoinStats

CoinStats is a common pick when someone wants one place to track coins across chains and exchanges, without turning it into a DeFi research project.

If you are doing reporting for a team, CoinStats can be a calmer fit than a DeFi-first dashboard. If you want the same clean-answers approach across your stack, it helps to use this simple way to pick analytics tools fast so you do not end up with five dashboards and no clarity.

5. Delta

Delta gets mentioned a lot by people who want to track crypto and other assets in one app. In Reddit threads, you will see people say they use it for stocks and crypto, and that it is packed with features.

For Web3 work, Delta can be useful for a high-level view. Still, it may not go as deep on DeFi positions as DeFi-native tools, so it depends if you need detail or just a clean snapshot.

6. Nansen Portfolio

If your work is closer to research, market intel, or what other wallets are doing, Nansen’s portfolio views can be useful because it sits next to behaviour and wallet labels.

This is less about a simple balance sheet and more about context. If you want your own brand to show up in AI answers next to that context, it helps to follow this straightforward way to earn AI citations and mentions so your content gets pulled into the answers people read.


How to pick the right tracker for your job

Start with one question. Are you tracking your own wallets, or are you tracking a product’s users and flows? Those are different jobs.

If you want personal tracking, you need accurate balances, DeFi positions, and a view that updates without issues. If you want product tracking, you also need wallet grouping and a way to share views with a team.

If search is part of your growth plan, it helps to understand how answers show up without clicks. This plain-English guide to zero-click search explains what to do next.


Common problems people hit and how to fix them

The first problem is missing positions. A tracker might show your tokens but skip your LP, your staked position, or your vault deposit.

The fix is boring but effective. Test the tracker with one wallet that has the suspicious stuff, not your clean wallet.

The second problem is price and paywalls. People get annoyed when a feature they used every day becomes paid.

The fix is to pick a tracker where the free tier still answers your core question. Then treat paid features like a business tool, not a surprise bill.


Final Thoughts

A multi-chain tracker is not a flex, it’s a time-saver.

Pick the tool that matches your day-to-day job, test it with your ugliest wallet, and make sure the view you need is not one pricing change away from ruining your Monday.


Frequently Asked Questions

Which portfolio tracker is best for DeFi LP positions across chains?

DeFi-first tools like DeBank, Zerion, and Zapper are usually where people start, because they focus on positions, not just balances.

Before you commit, test your real LP and staking positions, because protocol coverage is where most trackers fall over.

Why does my multi-chain tracker show the wrong balance?

Most wrong balance issues come from delayed indexing, missing token price feeds, or positions that are not recognised on that chain.

If the tracker lets you refresh, do that first. Then compare the position on-chain or in the protocol UI so you can see if the tracker is missing the position or just pricing it badly.

Can I track multiple wallets in one dashboard?

Yes, most trackers let you add multiple addresses, and some let you group them so you can see a single total.

If you are doing this for a team, pick a tool that makes sharing and reporting easy, or you will end up back in spreadsheet land.

Are these trackers safe to use?

Most of them work in read-only mode when you are just pasting an address, which is lower risk than connecting a wallet.

If a tool asks for wallet permissions, read what you are signing. Also keep a separate wallet for daily use so your long-term holdings are not exposed to every new app.

Which tracker helps with taxes?

Some portfolio tools have tax features, and some people use a dedicated tax tool instead.

If tax reporting is your main goal, pick a tool that can export clean transaction history, because that is what makes tax work less painful.

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