Ethereum News: Robinhood Chain processed 7.6 million daily transactions on July 10, just 11 days after its July 1 mainnet launch, closing sharply on Coinbase’s Base, which recorded 9.2 million over the same period.
The gap is narrowing faster than the Ethereum Layer 2 competitive landscape expected, and the mechanism driving it is straightforward: Robinhood is paying every user’s gas fee.
That transaction count matters less as a milestone than as a forcing function. Base built its position over multiple years with Coinbase’s exchange ecosystem, deep DeFi integrations, and first-mover liquidity.
Robinhood Chain has closed most of the gap in under two weeks, but through a promotional structure rather than organic demand. What happens in late September, when the subsidy expires, is the question the data cannot yet answer.
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Ethereum News: Gas subsidy is doing the heavy lifting, and the math is stark
Robinhood’s 90-day gas subsidy eliminates transaction costs entirely for users through the end of September 2026. The effect on volume is direct: retail traders, DeFi participants, and memecoin activity all flow toward zero-cost execution when a credible alternative exists.
MSBIntel noted that despite processing 7.6 million transactions in a single day, Robinhood Chain generated only roughly $4,000 in daily protocol fees, a figure that reflects both the subsidy absorbing user costs and the early-stage fee structure of an Arbitrum-based rollup.
For context, Base users pay for every transaction. The cost asymmetry between the two networks during the subsidy window makes direct transaction-count comparisons analytically incomplete. A fairer comparison arrives in October, when Robinhood Chain competes on equal footing.
The network’s activity extends beyond simple transfers. Robinhood Chain surpassed $500 million in single-day volume on Uniswap deployments, taking the second position behind Ethereum mainnet by spot activity. That volume figure, cited in the primary source reporting, indicates that liquidity is accumulating alongside transaction throughput, not merely inflating raw counts through micro-transactions.
Separately, earlier analysis of Robinhood Chain’s DEX volume surge flagged memecoin-driven activity as a significant contributor to that $500M-plus DEX day, which adds a durability caveat to the volume headline.
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Tokenized equities and 23 million users as structural differentiation
Where Robinhood Chain makes a genuinely differentiated argument is in its distribution and product stack. The network launched alongside Robinhood’s tokenized equities platform, with Chainlink providing oracle pricing for 95 tokenized assets including Nvidia, Apple, and Alphabet, Uniswap supplying trading liquidity, and Morpho supporting lending.
Those tokenized equities are available in more than 120 countries, a reach that no other Ethereum L2 has built around a brokerage-native user base.

Robinhood enters with approximately 23 million pre-existing brokerage users, a distribution channel that Base and Arbitrum have gradually built toward through crypto-native onboarding.
If even a fraction of those users engage with on-chain products post-subsidy, the retention argument becomes credible. The network being built on Arbitrum Orbit technology also positions it within an established fee-sharing ecosystem, with 10% of chain fees directed back to the ARB ecosystem, a structural alignment with the broader L2 stack rather than a competitive break from it.
HOOD stock has already priced in some of this optimism. The initial Layer 2 announcement lifted shares roughly 10%, with a further gain of approximately 7% coinciding with the rollout of AI-powered agentic trading functionality, according to Yahoo Finance data cited in the source reporting.
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