Openfort vs Dynamic

Independent. Open-source. Native smart accounts out of the box.

No credit card required • Free testnet accounts

Compare with


50+ teams use Openfort.

Read their stories
Merit Circle
Lifi
Gfal logo
Lucrum Cash
Open Loot
OKX
Animoca Brands
Portal
Trial Xtreme
Sophon
[ Why Openfort ]

Why developers are switching from Dynamic to Openfort

Independent open-source wallet infrastructure
[ Independent infrastructure ]

An independent, open-source wallet stack

Dynamic was acquired by Fireblocks in 2025 and is moving toward enterprise custody. Openfort is independent and open-source where it matters most: key management via OpenSigner, which you can audit, fork, or self-host. Your roadmap will not be dictated by an acquirer.

[ Native smart accounts ]

ERC-4337 and EIP-7702, in milliseconds

Openfort treats smart accounts as first-class citizens with native support for ERC-4337 and EIP-7702, built-in paymasters for gasless transactions, session keys, and batched operations. Sub-100ms wallet creation and 100–150ms signing — benchmarks public at openfort.io/benchmarks.

Native smart account architecture
Complete wallet stack
[ Complete stack ]

One SDK instead of five vendors

Dynamic is strong at wallet-connection UI, but you still need to source auth, smart accounts, paymasters, and signing infrastructure separately. Openfort bundles auth orchestration, embedded wallets, and onchain orchestration under one SDK. Bring any identity provider, ship in days.


[ RESULTS THAT MATTER ]

Fewer vendors. Faster signing. Lower gas.

Signing Speed Performance

Higher is better (normalized to 100%)

96%
125msOpenfort
94%
175msProvider 1
88%
350msProvider 2
4%
2850msProvider 3
Median Transaction Cost
Other AA wallets266,464
With Openfort235,432

*Updated September 2025

[ Keep reading ]

Explore other features at Openfort

Find out more about how teams are using Openfort

Embedded wallets

Non-custodial embedded wallets powered by OpenSigner, with full key export and self-hosting options. Read more

Account abstraction

Native smart accounts with paymasters for gasless transactions, session keys, and batched operations. Read more

Wallet automations

TEE backend wallets for server-side key storage with permissions and automatic transaction execution. Read more

I'm ready, how do I sign up?

[ FAQ ]

Frequently Asked Questions

Can't find your answer?

Openfort is an independent, open-source wallet infrastructure built around native smart accounts. Dynamic was acquired by Fireblocks in 2025 and is shifting toward enterprise. Openfort gives you ERC-4337 and EIP-7702 smart accounts, paymasters for gasless transactions, and self-hostable key management via OpenSigner. Dynamic is strongest at polished wallet-connection UI; Openfort delivers the full stack — auth orchestration, embedded wallets, signer, and onchain orchestration — under one SDK.

Yes. Fireblocks acquired Dynamic in 2025. Dynamic now operates under Fireblocks, which historically serves enterprise custody customers. Roadmap and pricing for developer-facing features may change.

Openfort smart account creation is sub-100ms and signing is in the 100–150ms band. Public, reproducible benchmarks are at openfort.io/benchmarks. Dynamic has historically shown higher signing latency, which matters for real-time UX in consumer and agent flows.

Dynamic uses tiered MAU pricing starting around $249/month for 5,000 MAUs. Openfort uses usage-based pricing per operation (wallet creation or transaction). That keeps costs predictable as your user base scales without per-seat penalties.

Yes. Smart accounts let you rotate signers without changing the wallet address, so users keep their assets and on-chain identity. You can also keep your existing auth provider and plug Openfort underneath.

Openfort ships SDKs for React, React Native, Unity, Unreal, and raw JavaScript/TypeScript across EVM chains and Solana. Bring any identity provider — Auth0, Firebase, custom OAuth — and pair it with any signer.

Acquired companies shift focus toward the acquirer’s priorities. Openfort is independent, open-source where it matters most (key management via OpenSigner), and aligned with developer needs. You can audit the signer, self-host it, or fork it.