Robinhood Chain Wallet: How to Add the Network and the Best Wallets to Use
Setting up a Robinhood Chain wallet is the very first thing you do before you can send ETH, mint a token or interact with any dApp on the network. The good news is that Robinhood Chain is 100% EVM-compatible (it is an Arbitrum Orbit L2 that settles on Ethereum), so any wallet you already use on Ethereum or Base works here too. You just have to add the network once, and you are ready to go.
In this guide we walk you through adding Robinhood Chain to MetaMask step by step, share the exact RPC and chainId settings, and give you our shortlist of the best wallets for Robinhood Chain. No coding, no guesswork.

What is Robinhood Chain and why do you need a wallet?
Robinhood Chain is an Arbitrum Orbit Layer 2 that settles on Ethereum and went live on July 1, 2026. It is fully EVM-compatible, which means the tooling, wallets and smart contracts you know from Ethereum behave exactly the same way here. The native gas token is ETH, the block explorer is Blockscout, and day one it shipped with Uniswap v2/v3/v4 plus UniswapX, a Chainlink oracle and stablecoins like USDG and USDe.
To hold ETH on the network, sign transactions or connect to any app, you need a self-custodial wallet with Robinhood Chain added. Think of the wallet as your passport: without it, none of the on-chain tools will open for you. If you want the full background first, read our what is Robinhood Chain explainer.
How to add Robinhood Chain to MetaMask (network settings)
Adding a custom network sounds intimidating the first time, but it takes about a minute. Open MetaMask, head to the network selector, choose Add a network manually and paste in the exact values below. These same settings work in Rabby, Trust Wallet, Coinbase Wallet or any EVM wallet that lets you add a custom RPC.
- Open your wallet and go to networks: in MetaMask, click the network dropdown at the top left, then Add a custom network (or Add network manually).
- Network name: enter Robinhood Chain.
- New RPC URL: paste https://rpc.mainnet.chain.robinhood.com.
- Chain ID: enter 4663. This is the number MetaMask uses to identify the network, so it has to be exact.
- Currency symbol: enter ETH, since ETH is the native gas token on Robinhood Chain.
- Block explorer URL: paste https://robinhoodchain.blockscout.com. The explorer is Blockscout, not Etherscan.
- Save and switch: hit Save, then select Robinhood Chain from the network list. Your wallet is now connected. That simple.
If you would rather test things risk-free before touching mainnet, there is a testnet with chainId 46630 and RPC https://rpc.testnet.chain.robinhood.com. Note that mainnet (4663) is where the live tools and contracts run, so use the testnet only to get comfortable with the flow.
Hit a snag? Two things trip people up. If MetaMask rejects the network, the chainId is almost always wrong: it must be exactly 4663. And if your balance shows but transactions fail, you probably have no ETH for gas yet; bridge or send a small amount of ETH to the network first. Once the RPC saves cleanly and you have a little ETH, everything works.
How to fund your Robinhood Chain wallet with ETH
Adding the network is only half the job: an empty wallet cannot do anything, because every action on Robinhood Chain costs a little ETH for gas. Since the chain is an Arbitrum Orbit L2 that settles on Ethereum, you get ETH onto it the same way you would with any L2, by bridging from Ethereum mainnet or another chain. There are two common paths.
- Bridge from Ethereum: use the official Robinhood Chain bridge (or a supported third-party bridge) to move ETH from Ethereum mainnet to Robinhood Chain. Confirm the destination chainId is 4663 before you send, and start with a small test amount the first time.
- Withdraw from an exchange: if your exchange supports Robinhood Chain withdrawals directly, you can send ETH straight to your wallet address. If it does not yet, withdraw ETH to Ethereum first, then bridge across in step one.
Once the ETH lands, you will see the balance appear on the Robinhood Chain network in your wallet, and you can confirm the transaction on the Blockscout explorer by pasting your address. Keep a small buffer of ETH for gas at all times: even a cheap L2 transaction needs a few cents of ETH to go through.
Best Robinhood Chain wallet options to use
Because Robinhood Chain is a standard EVM network, you are spoiled for choice. Any wallet that supports custom EVM networks will work with the chainId 4663 settings above. Here are the six we recommend, with the honest pros and cons of each, so you can match a wallet to how you actually use crypto.
1. MetaMask: the safe default
The default choice for most EVM users, and for good reason. MetaMask is available as a browser extension and a mobile app, it has been battle-tested by millions of users since 2016, and it connects to virtually every dApp out there. Because Robinhood Chain is a standard Arbitrum Orbit L2, MetaMask treats it like any other EVM network once you have pasted the chainId 4663 settings: sending ETH, approving tokens and signing transactions all work exactly as they do on Ethereum or Base.
Adding Robinhood Chain manually with the settings above takes about a minute, and once saved it stays in your network list forever. When you connect to a Smithii tool or any Robinhood Chain dApp, MetaMask will simply prompt you to switch to the network you already added. If you are brand new to self-custody, MetaMask is also the wallet with the most tutorials, community threads and support articles online, so you are never stuck for long.
- Pros: works everywhere, huge dApp support, browser plus mobile, easy to add a custom RPC.
- Cons: transaction previews are basic, and the interface can feel busy for first-timers.
2. Rabby: best for power users
Rabby is the power-user favorite, built by the DeBank team specifically for people who move across many chains. The killer feature is that it auto-detects the network a dApp is asking for, so you rarely have to switch to Robinhood Chain by hand: connect to a Robinhood Chain app and Rabby lines up chainId 4663 for you. Before you sign anything it shows a plain-English transaction preview, including the exact balance changes and the ETH gas cost, so you always know what you are approving.
On a young network like Robinhood Chain that safety layer matters more than usual. Rabby flags risky token approvals and unlimited allowances before you confirm, which is exactly the kind of scam that hits users interacting with fresh dApps. If you juggle several EVM chains, care about signing hygiene, and want to import your existing MetaMask seed phrase to keep the same addresses, Rabby is hard to beat.
- Pros: best-in-class transaction previews, pre-sign risk warnings, auto-detects the active chain so you rarely switch networks by hand.
- Cons: desktop extension is the main experience; the mobile app is newer and less mature.
3. Trust Wallet: best mobile all-rounder
Trust Wallet is a mobile-first option with a clean interface and a built-in dApp browser, which is what makes it shine on a phone. Because Robinhood Chain is a custom EVM network, you add it inside Trust Wallet the same way you would in MetaMask: open the network settings, choose to add a network manually, and enter the chainId 4663 details from the section above. From then on your Robinhood Chain balance sits right next to your other assets.
The built-in browser is the real advantage: you can open a Robinhood Chain dApp or a Smithii tool directly inside the app and connect without bouncing between MetaMask and Safari. If you mostly manage crypto from your phone and want everything in one pocket-sized app, Trust Wallet keeps the whole flow, from holding ETH to signing a transaction, on a single screen.
- Pros: polished mobile UX, built-in dApp browser, supports a huge range of chains and tokens out of the box.
- Cons: browser-extension experience is weaker than the app, so heavy desktop users may prefer MetaMask or Rabby.
4. Coinbase Wallet: best for beginners
Coinbase Wallet (the self-custodial app, not the exchange account) is the friendliest entry point if you are newer to web3. Its interface holds your hand through connecting and signing, uses plain language instead of crypto jargon, and supports custom EVM networks so Robinhood Chain drops in with the chainId 4663 settings above. It is a genuinely good first Robinhood Chain wallet.
The one thing to keep straight: the self-custodial Coinbase Wallet, where you control the keys and can add Robinhood Chain, is not the same as the balance you hold inside the Coinbase exchange. You want the standalone wallet app or extension for on-chain building. The upside is a smooth on-ramp: if you already keep funds on the Coinbase exchange, moving ETH into your self-custodial wallet and onto Robinhood Chain is only a couple of taps.
- Pros: beginner-friendly, clean design, easy on-ramp if you already use the Coinbase exchange.
- Cons: fewer advanced controls than Rabby; do not confuse the self-custodial wallet with your custodial exchange balance.
5. Rainbow: best-looking daily driver
Rainbow is a design-first EVM wallet available on mobile and as a browser extension, and it is the one most people call the best-looking. It turns portfolio tracking into something you actually enjoy checking: your Robinhood Chain tokens and NFTs render with clean artwork and readable balances instead of a wall of hex. Adding a custom network like Robinhood Chain is done from settings with the same chainId 4663 values, no fuss.
Rainbow shines as a daily driver for someone who values a modern, polished feel over deep multi-chain power tooling. It handles the essentials on Robinhood Chain, holding ETH, connecting to dApps, and signing, smoothly, and syncs cleanly between the mobile app and the extension so your wallet feels the same on phone and desktop.
- Pros: gorgeous interface, strong NFT display, smooth mobile and extension experience.
- Cons: less geared toward multi-chain power users than Rabby.
6. Ledger: best for large balances
If you are holding a meaningful amount of ETH on Robinhood Chain, a hardware wallet like Ledger is the safest option because your private keys never leave the device. Ledger is not a standalone Robinhood Chain wallet on its own; instead you pair it with MetaMask or Rabby, add the chainId 4663 network in that software wallet, and select the Ledger account. Your familiar interface stays the same, but the keys sit in cold storage.
Every transaction, whether you are sending ETH, approving a token, or deploying a contract through a Smithii tool, has to be confirmed physically on the device, so a compromised computer cannot drain your funds. That extra step is overkill for a few dollars of test ETH, but it is exactly what you want once real value is on the line. Treat Ledger as the security layer on top of MetaMask or Rabby rather than a replacement for them.
- Pros: keys never leave the device, physical confirmation on every signature, works alongside MetaMask or Rabby.
- Cons: costs money up front and adds a step to every transaction; overkill for small test amounts.
Quick comparison
| Wallet | Best for | Platform |
|---|---|---|
| MetaMask | The safe default | Extension + mobile |
| Rabby | Power users, safer signing | Extension + mobile |
| Trust Wallet | Mobile all-rounder | Mobile + extension |
| Coinbase Wallet | Beginners | Extension + mobile |
| Rainbow | Best-looking daily driver | Mobile + extension |
| Ledger | Large balances (hardware) | Device + MetaMask/Rabby |
What to do after your wallet is set up
Once your Robinhood Chain wallet is connected and you have some ETH for gas, the whole network opens up. This is where it gets fun: you can build without writing a single line of code.
Hiring a developer to write and deploy a smart contract is expensive, typically $200 USD or more, and you still have to trust their code. That is exactly why the online tools in the Smithii suite open up the crypto ecosystem to anyone, letting you launch a token without writing a single line of code. With the Robinhood Chain Token Creator you can deploy your own audited ERC-20 token, with zero coding knowledge, for just 0.01 ETH (around $35 USD). Connect the wallet you just added, fill in the name, ticker and supply, confirm one transaction, and your token is live on Robinhood Chain in about a minute.
From there you can distribute tokens to your community with the Robinhood Chain Multisender for just 0.0001 ETH, or protect your launch with Anti-Bot and Anti-Whale settings. It is the all-in-one solution for web3 projects.
You might also like: Robinhood Chain airdrop, how to create a meme coin on Robinhood Chain and how to create a token on Robinhood Chain.
FAQ
What is the Robinhood Chain chainId and RPC?
The mainnet chainId is 4663 and the RPC URL is https://rpc.mainnet.chain.robinhood.com. The native gas currency is ETH and the block explorer is Blockscout at https://robinhoodchain.blockscout.com. The testnet uses chainId 46630.
Which wallet is best for Robinhood Chain?
There is no single best wallet, it depends on how you use crypto. MetaMask is the safe default and works everywhere. Rabby is best for power users who want richer transaction previews. Trust Wallet and Coinbase Wallet are strong mobile-first picks. All of them support Robinhood Chain because it is a standard EVM network.
Is the Robinhood Chain wallet the same as the Robinhood app wallet?
No. This guide is about a self-custodial EVM wallet (MetaMask, Rabby, and so on) connected to the Robinhood Chain network, where you hold your own keys. That is different from the custodial wallet inside the Robinhood app. For on-chain building and dApps, you want a self-custodial wallet.
What gas token does Robinhood Chain use?
Robinhood Chain uses ETH as its native gas token, just like Ethereum and other Arbitrum Orbit L2s. So set your wallet currency symbol to ETH, and keep a small amount of ETH in your wallet to pay for transactions.
Why is the explorer Blockscout and not Etherscan?
Robinhood Chain uses Blockscout as its official block explorer. Use it to view transactions, check balances and verify contracts. Etherscan does not support chainId 4663, so always point your explorer links to Blockscout.
Can I use my existing Ethereum wallet on Robinhood Chain?
Yes. Robinhood Chain is 100% EVM-compatible, so your existing address and seed phrase work across Ethereum, Base and Robinhood Chain without creating anything new. You just add the chainId 4663 network to the wallet you already use and switch to it. Never share your seed phrase or private key with anyone, and treat any site that asks for it as a scam.
Conclusion
Adding a Robinhood Chain wallet is a one-time, one-minute job: paste the RPC, set chainId 4663, use ETH as the currency, and point the explorer to Blockscout. Pick MetaMask if you want the safe default, Rabby for extra transaction safety, or Trust Wallet and Coinbase Wallet for a mobile-first experience. Once you are connected, the whole network is yours to build on.
Now that your wallet is ready, it is time to create your first token on Robinhood Chain, and once it is live you can verify the contract on Blockscout so holders trust it. Do not forget to subscribe to our newsletter to catch every new tool and opportunity before anyone else.
The complete Robinhood Chain toolkit
Everything you need to launch and grow a project on Robinhood Chain, all no-code with Smithii:
- Get started: What is Robinhood Chain · best wallets
- Create & launch: create a token · create a meme coin · create a liquidity pool
- Distribute: airdrop ERC-20 tokens · airdrop & testnet guide
- Manage & verify: add a logo & socials · verify your contract · get the holders list
- Grow: volume bot · market maker
- Launchpad bots: Noxa bundler · Noxa volume bot · Flap volume bot · Trench volume bot · Bankr volume bot

CEO & Co-Founder at Smithii. Building on Solana since 2021 and sharing playbooks from the trenches. Also founder of Lince after years investing in DeFi.




