Independent foundational guide

Robinhood Chain Ecosystem

A category-based map of the applications and infrastructure around Robinhood Chain, with a framework for separating official network support from third-party risk.

Last reviewed: July 12, 2026 · Primary sources prioritized

Direct answer

The Robinhood Chain ecosystem includes wallets, bridges, exchanges, lending protocols, perpetual-trading venues, stablecoin infrastructure, oracles, RPC providers, analytics, custody, compliance, and developer tools. Robinhood’s official documentation currently names providers and applications including Alchemy, LayerZero, Chainlink, Fireblocks, BitGo, Allium, CoinGecko, Uniswap, Rialto, Morpho, Lighter, Arcus, Paxos, Zerion, and TRM Labs. Inclusion does not mean Robinhood guarantees the safety or suitability of a third-party protocol.

Network status
Public mainnet live
Application model
Permissionless third-party deployment
Core user categories
Wallets, bridges, trading, lending, analytics
Core infrastructure
RPC, oracles, messaging, custody, compliance
Official listing meaning
Discovery/support information, not a safety guarantee
Primary verification
Official domain, contract, chain, audit, current status
Chain ID
4663
Gas asset
ETH

How to read the ecosystem

An ecosystem page should answer two different questions: “What exists?” and “What can be trusted?” The first is a discovery problem. The second requires evidence, and the answer is rarely binary.

Hoodchain.info separates network-level facts, third-party project claims, and independent risk observations. A project can be real but risky; supported but unaudited; audited but illiquid; or technically open while legally unavailable to a user.

Ecosystem categories

CategoryPurposeExamples named in official documentation
Wallets and wallet dataHold assets, connect to applications, display portfoliosRobinhood Wallet, compatible EVM wallets, Zerion data
Bridges and messagingMove assets and messages across networksCanonical Arbitrum bridge, LayerZero, Chainlink CCIP, Relay, Across, LiFi, 0x
Spot tradingExchange tokens onchainUniswap, Rialto
LendingBorrow, lend, and use collateralMorpho
PerpetualsLeveraged derivative tradingLighter, Arcus
StablecoinsSettlement and quote assetsPaxos / USDG
RPC and account abstractionApplication connectivity and programmable walletsAlchemy and other providers
OraclesOnchain market dataChainlink
Analytics and trackingNetwork, token, and portfolio informationAllium, CoinGecko
Institutional custodyOperational asset custodyFireblocks, BitGo
Compliance and riskScreening and blockchain intelligenceTRM Labs

Wallets

A wallet is the user’s access layer, not a guarantee of every token or application displayed inside it. Robinhood Wallet supports Robinhood Chain, and standard EVM wallets can add the network manually.

  • Check whether the wallet is custodial, self-custodial, smart-contract based, or account-abstraction based.
  • Understand recovery, backup, and device-loss procedures.
  • Confirm the wallet supports custom tokens and the correct explorer.
  • Treat in-wallet discovery lists as convenience, not independent due diligence.

Bridges

Bridges connect Robinhood Chain to other networks. The canonical bridge is the default Ethereum-to-Robinhood route and inherits its core security model from Ethereum and Arbitrum contracts, while partner routes optimize for speed, coverage, or composability.

  • Canonical bridge: slower withdrawals but fewer third-party validation assumptions.
  • Messaging and OFT routes: support cross-chain token designs and programmable transfers.
  • Intent-based bridges: use solvers or liquidity providers for fast execution.
  • Aggregators: search across routes and can combine swaps with bridging.

Bridge choice should reflect value, urgency, source chain, asset support, contract risk, liquidity, fees, and recovery options—not only quoted speed.

Trading applications

Public exchanges allow users to trade assets without a traditional order-routing account. Uniswap is named as a public DEX supporting the network, and other venue types may include automated market makers, proprietary-liquidity systems, or aggregators.

  • Verify the token contract and trading pair.
  • Check liquidity depth, price impact, and route.
  • Do not interpret high volume as proof of quality or legitimacy.
  • Understand that permissionless markets can list counterfeit or highly speculative tokens.
  • Review approval amounts before trading.

Lending and collateral

Lending protocols can allow users to supply assets, borrow against collateral, or integrate tokenized real-world assets into credit markets. Morpho is listed in official ecosystem documentation.

A lending position adds liquidation thresholds, oracle dependencies, interest-rate changes, collateral concentration, market-liquidity risk, and protocol governance risk. A Stock Token accepted as collateral does not become a traditional brokerage asset.

Oracles and market data

Chainlink provides price feeds and cross-chain infrastructure in the documented ecosystem. Price feeds let smart contracts read reference data, which is essential for Stock Token applications, lending, liquidations, and structured products.

An oracle feed is one component. Applications must select the correct feed, account for decimals and multipliers, handle stale data, and design circuit breakers. End users still face venue pricing and contract-integration risk.

Infrastructure for developers

  • RPC providers connect applications to blockchain nodes.
  • Data APIs index balances, transactions, NFTs, and portfolio activity.
  • Account abstraction can support gas sponsorship, batching, spending policies, and session keys.
  • Cross-chain messaging allows actions across multiple networks.
  • Full nodes provide greater independence but require substantial hardware and operations.
  • Explorers help inspect contracts, addresses, events, and transactions.

Official documentation recommends provider infrastructure for production because the public RPC is rate-limited and can be modified or unavailable.

How Hoodchain.info will evaluate projects

SignalWhat we will record
IdentityOfficial domain, organization, public team or accountable entity
DeploymentVerified Robinhood Chain contract addresses
StatusAnnounced, testnet, mainnet, paused, deprecated, or inactive
FunctionWallet, bridge, DEX, lending, oracle, analytics, infrastructure, other
CustodyWho controls keys or assets
AuditsAuditor, date, scope, version, and unresolved findings
Admin controlsUpgradeability, pausing, privileged roles, multisig
LiquidityRelevant depth and concentration, not only headline TVL
Legal accessKnown restrictions and required accounts or checks
IncidentsExploits, pauses, insolvencies, migrations, or material warnings
Review dateWhen Hoodchain.info last rechecked the information

Official, integrated, listed, and endorsed are different

A provider can support Robinhood Chain technically without being operated by Robinhood. A project can appear in official documentation without Robinhood guaranteeing its safety. Robinhood explicitly states that third-party inclusion is not an endorsement, sponsorship, affiliation, or warranty.

Every Hoodchain.info profile will preserve that distinction. We will not use an official-logo collage as a substitute for project-level verification.

What to monitor as the ecosystem matures

  • Sustained active addresses rather than launch spikes.
  • Stablecoin and bridge liquidity.
  • Stock Token usage beyond simple transfers.
  • Lending utilization and liquidation behavior.
  • Application revenue and organic retention.
  • Security incidents and upgrade quality.
  • Developer deployment and tooling depth.
  • Concentration among a small number of apps or speculative assets.
  • Geographic availability and regulatory clarity.

Frequently asked questions

What apps are on Robinhood Chain?

Official documentation lists infrastructure and applications across wallets, bridges, trading, lending, perpetuals, oracles, analytics, stablecoins, custody, and compliance. The set is expected to change.

Is every project listed by Robinhood safe?

No. Robinhood explicitly says third-party inclusion does not constitute endorsement or a warranty of safety, legitimacy, or suitability.

Which wallet supports Robinhood Chain?

Robinhood Wallet supports the chain, and compatible EVM wallets can add it using the official network configuration.

Which DEX supports Robinhood Chain?

Uniswap is named as a public DEX in official ecosystem documentation. Users should verify the current deployment and token contracts.

Can Stock Tokens be used in DeFi?

Their ERC-20 structure and price feeds allow integration, but each protocol introduces additional smart-contract, liquidity, oracle, liquidation, and legal risks.

How will Hoodchain.info decide which projects to include?

Profiles will require verifiable relevance to Robinhood Chain and will record status, contracts, custody, audits, controls, risks, sources, and review dates.

Primary sources

These sources were used to verify the network, product structure, and risk statements on this page.

  1. Robinhood Chain documentation and ecosystem list
  2. Robinhood Chain bridging routes
  3. Network and infrastructure providers
  4. Third-party and network risk disclosures

Continue reading

Search intent coverage

This editorial note makes the scope explicit for search engines, LLMs, and content reviewers. The page is designed to answer the following query families without treating them as separate products or unsupported claims.

Robinhood Chain ecosystemRobinhood Chain projectsRobinhood Chain appsRobinhood Chain dAppsRobinhood Chain DeFiRobinhood Chain walletsRobinhood Chain bridgesRobinhood Chain lendingRobinhood Chain infrastructure