The Robinhood Chain project has brought attention to the gap between user fees collected by Layer 2 blockchains and the revenue generated for the Ethereum mainnet. Recent data reveals a striking disparity, with users paying substantial fees while Ethereum receives only a fraction as compensation for settlement and data availability services.
Layer 2 Fee Flows: Robinhood versus Ethereum
User fees on the Robinhood Chain surpassed $800,000, yet only about $1,600 was routed to Ethereum. According to statistics shared by Ethereum Daily, the user fee for the given period totaled $843,000, while the amount passed on to the Ethereum network reached just under $1,600, covering the costs of data availability and settlement.
Crypto analyst Lorenzo Valente referenced an earlier set of figures, noting that Robinhood Chain generated approximately $816,000 in total fees at that time, with $1,538 remitted to Ethereum. Valente attributed 89% of the revenue to Robinhood, 10% to Arbitrum, and only 0.15% to Ethereum, illustrating the current distribution of fee income among participants in the chain’s ecosystem.
This arrangement has led some observers to question whether Robinhood Chain is providing significant value to Ethereum. Concerns stem from the fact that most of the revenue remains within the Layer 2 and the connected Arbitrum ecosystem, with Ethereum seeing only minimal direct financial benefit.
Valente highlighted the efficiency of Robinhood Chain’s revenue model, noting that Robinhood captures the majority of user-paid fees, leaving Ethereum’s share comparatively negligible.
Mini dictionary: Robinhood Chain is a Layer 2 scaling solution for Ethereum, built on Arbitrum, designed to offer lower fees and faster transactions for real asset trading and decentralized finance.
| Entity | Fees Received ($) | Share of Revenue (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Robinhood Chain | ~843,000 | 89 |
| Arbitrum | ~94,000 | 10 |
| Ethereum | ~1,600 | 0.15 |
Arbitrum’s Role and Revenue Distribution
The Robinhood Chain leverages Arbitrum, a prominent Ethereum Layer 2 technology, to transmit transactions to the Ethereum mainnet for finalization. The revenue sharing structure allocates 10% of protocol income to the Arbitrum ecosystem, with 8% directed to the ecosystem’s decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) treasury and 2% reserved for developer incentives. This demonstrates Robinhood Chain’s contribution to Arbitrum’s revenue while keeping Ethereum’s share to a minimum.
Ethereum Daily pointed out that fee revenue does not capture the full impact of Robinhood Chain’s activity. Robinhood has enabled stock token trading via its wallet in over 120 countries, expanding user access to tokenized stocks and decentralized applications, such as lending and collateral platforms.
Eligible users can engage in round-the-clock trading and participate in decentralized finance products, further expanding Robinhood Chain’s service offerings and user engagement.
Implications for ETH Demand and Liquidity
The network recorded $70 million in bridged Ether and $100 million in total value locked (TVL) in its early days, signaling rapid adoption. Uniswap, an established decentralized exchange and core Robinhood Chain partner, saw daily volumes approach $500 million as liquidity flowed in through various incentive initiatives, lending products, and transactional growth.
With the Robinhood Chain using ETH as its native gas token, an increase in network activity could drive meaningful demand for ETH as a transactional, collateral, and staking asset. The rising volume of ETH bridged from Ethereum to Robinhood Chain—having surged approximately 70-fold in one week past the $70 million mark—illustrates the pace of adoption and potential impact on ETH markets.
Nevertheless, the most significant share of fee revenue remains with Robinhood Chain and the Arbitrum ecosystem, with Ethereum’s income from user fees continuing to lag behind transaction growth. The long-term effect will depend on whether the platform’s expansion translates into sustained demand for ETH for essential network functions.
Joe Lubin, Ethereum co-founder, has emphasized the importance of low fees on Ethereum Layer 1 to foster broader growth and encourage expanded use of both mainnet and Layer 2 solutions.
Lubin argues that broader Ethereum adoption—across mainnet, Layer 2 networks, and private chains—will increase the overall use of ETH for gas, collateral, and staking. As network usage grows, more ETH can also be removed from circulating supply through transaction burns, potentially benefiting holders in the longer term.
Robinhood publicly launched the mainnet of Robinhood Chain on July 1. The project aims to facilitate trading in real assets, decentralized finance products, and tokenized stocks—supported by technology partners like Uniswap, Chainlink, and Morpho—while leveraging Arbitrum’s Layer 2 infrastructure for scaling.




