Don't listen to @Onions, some hardware wallets are absolutely great. He has very high standards in requiring an airgapped signing device, but those make the process of spending the bitcoin that you already have much more complicated than it should be. I'd never suggest one for a newb. Advanced users only.
I've tried many hardware wallets and signing devices. Many are airgapped too. Here's what I'd suggest for a "Relative Newb":
  1. Jade wallet by Blockstream (cheapest & airgapped)
  2. Coldcard (Most security options by far)
  3. Keystone (Best UX by far & airgapped)
  4. Trezor (Good UX & company, but not airgapped.)
Since Jade's UX leaves a lot to be desired it's not great for total newbs... I'd go with a Keystone for that. But Coldcard has soooo many great little security checks that it's hard not to want to keep your coins there once you are more experienced.
It should also go without saying that you will want to back up your seed phrase on metal no matter which option you go with. -And that any passwords you try to remember are for Wallets only, never for the seedphrase itself (25th word). -Those were one of the most horrible ideas in the history of cryptography.
deleted by author
reply
You do know that stamping your seed onto washers and putting them around a bolt is one of the most recommended ways to keep it in metal, right? How is that overpriced?
And I may understand more than you think. I've been storing coins since 2012. I've tried out 6 HW wallets and a seedsigner. I even tried a brain wallet once but nearly lost that due to having only a human brain with human-level memory recall.
reply
deleted by author
reply
Blockstream doesn't know I'm a client.
Trezor has BTC-Only firmware. (But I agree they should airgap)
Keystone has BTC-Only firmware too. In fact they have like 4 flavors of firmware to choose from.
reply