Updated July 14, 2026
Robinhood Chain is not one of MetaMask’s built-in networks, so you have to add it before your wallet can see balances or sign transactions on it. Press the button below and your wallet will do it for you — every field prefilled, nothing to type.
Prefer to do it by hand? The full settings are right below, along with why this is safe.
Add Robinhood Chain in one click
Your wallet will ask you to confirm. Adding a network grants no spending permission and cannot move your funds — it only tells the wallet which endpoint to talk to.
The exact values to enter under Add a network manually.
Network name
Robinhood Chain
Any label works — this is just what your wallet displays.
RPC URL
https://rpc.mainnet.chain.robinhood.com
The official public endpoint. Free, no API key, rate-limited.
Chain ID
4663
0x1237 in hexadecimal.
Currency symbol
ETH
Robinhood Chain uses ETH for gas — there is no separate gas token.
Block explorer URL
https://robinhoodchain.blockscout.com
Blockscout. Lets your wallet deep-link to transactions.
If you would rather not click a button that talks to your wallet — a reasonable instinct — every field is below. Open MetaMask → Settings → Networks → Add a network manually and fill them in.
Adding a network is one of the few genuinely harmless things you can do in a wallet. It grants no spending permission and cannot move your funds. All it does is tell your wallet which server to ask about balances and where to broadcast transactions. Nothing is signed, and nothing is approved.
The things that can cost you money are separate, later actions: signing a transaction, and approving a token allowance. Stay careful there.
One real caution: only ever add a network from a source you trust. A malicious RPC endpoint cannot steal your keys, but it can lie to you about balances and prices, and it can see which addresses you look up. The endpoint on this page is Robinhood’s official public one, and it is the same endpoint this site runs on.
Robinhood Chain is a standard EVM chain, so essentially any Ethereum-compatible wallet works:
On mobile, browser extensions do not exist — open this page inside your wallet app’s built-in browser and the one-click button will work there.
Note that Robinhood Chain is not one of MetaMask’s built-in networks, so it will not appear until you add it.
Adding the network does not give you a balance. Your wallet will show 0 ETH on Robinhood Chain until you move funds across. Gas is paid in ETH, so you need a little of it before you can do anything at all.
The canonical route is the Arbitrum bridge portal, which Robinhood’s own docs point to. Deposits from Ethereum typically confirm within about ten minutes. Third-party bridges such as Across and Relay are usually faster.
Withdrawing back to Ethereum is the slow direction: it goes through a seven-day challenge period, which is a property of how optimistic rollups prove themselves honest, not a fee or a lock-up. Plan around it.
Gas on Robinhood Chain is cheap — fractions of a cent for a simple transfer — so you do not need to bridge much to get started.
With the network added and a little ETH bridged, you can use anything on the chain. Two obvious places to start:
If you want the raw network reference instead — endpoints, testnet, architecture — see the network details page.
The fastest way is to press the one-click add button on this page, which asks MetaMask to add the network for you and prefills every field. To add it manually, open MetaMask, go to Settings → Networks → Add a network manually, and enter the RPC URL https://rpc.mainnet.chain.robinhood.com, chain ID 4663, currency symbol ETH, and block explorer https://robinhoodchain.blockscout.com.
No. Robinhood Chain is not one of MetaMask's built-in networks, so you have to add it before you can see balances or sign transactions on it. Adding a network is free and does not move any funds.
No. Adding a network only tells your wallet which endpoint to talk to — it grants no spending permission and cannot move funds. Approving token allowances and signing transactions are separate actions you control.
Any EVM-compatible wallet works, including MetaMask, Rabby, Coinbase Wallet, Trust Wallet, and Phantom's EVM mode, along with hardware wallets like Ledger and Trezor used through them.