Robinhood has officially launched the public testnet for its new Ethereum Layer-2 network, marking a major step toward bringing its millions of users on-chain. Built on Arbitrum technology (ARB crypto), this “Robinhood Chain” aims to reduce fees and introduce traditional traders to the world of decentralized finance (DeFi).
Robinhood Chain public testnet is live
Developers can now rely on a financial grade Ethereum Layer 2 based on @arbitrum– designed to support real-world and digital tokenized assets.
Start building with the basic Robinhood Chain foundations:
-Robinhood (@RobinhoodApp) February 11, 2026
In announcing on
RobinHood Enters the Layer 2 Race: What Is a Layer 2 and Why Should You Care?
If you’re new to crypto, think of Ethereum as a busy major highway that is often blocked, making tolls (gas fees) expensive (historically!). A Layer 2 (L2) network is like adding an expressway on top of this highway; it’s faster and cheaper, but still uses the safety of the main road.
By building its own L2, Robinhood is expanding its offering beyond crypto and stock trading; this creates a playing field where developers can create applications that allow users to trade tokenized assets at a lower cost. This aligns with Vitalik Buterin’s L2 roadmap, which envisions these networks as the primary means by which ordinary people will interact with blockchain in the future.
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Arbitrum’s new secret weapon? How the Robinhood Channel Works
THE Robinhood Channel is built using technology from Offchain Labs (Arbitrum), one of the leading names in Ethereum scaling. The objective here is precise: to bridge the gap between traditional finance (TradFi) and crypto.
Developers can now start testing apps in a “low-stakes” environment without using real money. The big goal? Tokenized assets.
- Action tokens: Robinhood is testing ways to represent stocks (like specific US stocks) as tokens on the blockchain.
- Low costs: By leveraging Arbitrum’s technology, transactions cost pennies, not dollars.
- Partners: They do not build alone; integrations include heavyweights like Chainlink and LayerZero.
This decision comes at an interesting time. While projects like MegaETH seek raw speed, Robinhood optimizes for user experience and compliance. According to Robinhood Crypto CEO Johann Kerbrat, this allows them to “rebuild some of our systems” rather than just scaling them.
Why it matters beyond retail
This is what we often call “adoption.” Robinhood has the massive user base needed to onboard millions of people who find native DeFi too scary or technical. However, it also highlights the trend of companies building their own chains – in the same way that ENS abandoned its own L2 plans to focus on strategy, Robinhood is diving headfirst into infrastructure to own the customer relationship.
For investors, this could potentially restore value to Ethereum, especially as the price of Ethereum fluctuates and the market looks for real utility to stabilize it. But don’t forget the risk: this is likely a “walled garden” version of crypto, heavily regulated and not as free as the pure DeFi ecosystems experienced traders are used to.
The mainnet is scheduled to launch later in 2026. We will see if they can truly merge the simplicity of their application with the power of blockchain without compromising the spirit of crypto.
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Robinhood’s Ethereum Layer-2 Enters Public Testnet: Why It Matters appeared first on 99Bitcoins.



