0

I am using Bitcoin Core Wallet .21 and have encrypted my wallet.

When I try to send some coins it asks for the passphrase, which it says is incorrect.

I have only ever used one of two passphrases and I have copied and pasted these each time using notepad (upper and lower cases), but it rejects my passphrase every time. There is nothing wrong with my passphrase, I know my passphrase is correct.

Are there any circumstances under which the wallet would behave like this?

I have used old backup files of my wallet, but get the same message.

Could my wallet be corrupt and if so can it be repaired anyway?

1 Answer 1

1

Are there any circumstances under which the wallet would behave like this?

If your passphrase contains non-ASCII characters, then you could have an encoding issue. I would try typing in the pass-phrase rather than cutting it out of Notepad and pasting it.

Unicode has multiple normalisation forms and this is another thing that could theoretically trip up software.

Could my wallet be corrupt ...

Yes, but your backups show the same result. If you successfully used the passphrase anytime after making a backup it is very unlikely that wallet corruption is the cause.

... and if so can it be repaired anyway?

No-one can tell you that. Repairing an encrypted file is improbable.

3
  • Nope. They were all ascii characters. I used the notepad copy/paste to avoid spelling mistakes. Encryption is definitely worth keeping well away from. If the damned wallet had it's own login password, then I would never have encrypted the wallet in the first place. Two thumbs down for the Bitcoin Core Wallet...
    – JackB
    Commented Apr 6, 2021 at 12:34
  • @JackB encryption is the only way to secure your wallet. Simply asking for a password when opened (like Excel does, IIRC) is extremely insecure as you could just use another piece of software to directly read your keys. It is likely you have simply forgotten the correct password and are using the wrong one. Commented Jan 1, 2022 at 0:17
  • This may help: bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/3313/… Commented Jan 1, 2022 at 0:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.