Is there a Robinhood Chain trading bot?
Yes. Trading bots exist for Robinhood Chain (chain 4663), ranging from Telegram-style bots that route swaps for you to browser terminals that sign transactions in your own wallet. Nock Terminal ships NockBot, a Telegram bot for chain 4663 with pre-swap simulation. Any bot's usefulness depends on its custody model, its execution logic, and how it charges fees — verify those before you fund it.
"Bot" is not a single product category. The key axis is who holds the keys during a trade. Nock Terminal publishes this answer and is an independent product; it is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or partnered with Robinhood Markets, Inc.
In this article, see also: our chain-4663 trading-bot shortlistthe NockBot Telegram botNock Auto same-wallet automation.
Nuances and current status
Custodial bots hold funds on your behalf; you gain speed, you accept custody risk. Non-custodial bots build a transaction your own wallet signs; you retain custody, at the cost of one extra confirmation step.
Pre-swap simulation matters more than any UI polish — a simulation shows the price, tax, and slippage the trade will actually receive on chain 4663 before you sign.
Limitations and what to verify
No trading bot removes memecoin risk. Speed of execution does not change the underlying contract behaviour of the token being bought.
Bots that route through their own pooled liquidity, or that add unexplained fees, can quietly worsen fills. Read the fee model and the routing docs before enabling automation.
Safe workflow
Evaluate any chain-4663 bot on five points:
- Custody — does the bot hold keys, or does your wallet sign each swap?
- Simulation — does it show a pre-swap preview with tax and slippage?
- Fees — is the bot fee visible in the preview, not buried after the swap?
- Coverage — does it recognise pools on chain 4663 the same way your screener does?
- Safety limits — can you cap position size, slippage, and daily spend?
Frequently asked questions
Is NockBot custodial? See the NockBot documentation for the current custody model and fee structure. Use the criteria above to evaluate it the same way you would evaluate any other chain-4663 bot. Can a bot guarantee a fill on a new pool? No. Fills depend on block ordering, pool state and gas at the moment of the swap; no bot can guarantee inclusion or a specific price on-chain. Are bots on other chains automatically compatible with chain 4663? Not automatically. A bot that supports EVM chains still needs explicit chain-4663 integration to route through its pools and index its events.
Related
Sources checked
First-party pages used to write or verify the entries above. Vendor pages change frequently — treat each source as the authoritative reference for its own product, not this article.
- NockBot — Nock Terminal Telegram bot— Publisher's own bot; evaluate against the criteria above.
- Uniswap v4 overview— Reference for how bots must route swaps through chain-4663 pools.
Trade Robinhood Chain like a pro
Screener, live pairs and one-tap execution — all built for chain 4663.