Robinhood Chain token holder
A token holder on Robinhood Chain is any on-chain address (EOA or smart contract) that currently holds a non-zero balance of a specific ERC-20 token on chain 4663. Blockscout enumerates holders by scanning transfer events and computing current balances; the resulting count and distribution are the two numbers people usually mean when they say "holders."
Holder counts describe address behaviour, not people. One person can control many addresses and one address (an exchange or LP contract) can custody balances for many people, so the number needs interpretation before it is useful.
In this article, see also: how to read holder concentrationhow to read the underlying token contracttoken contract definitionmemecoin red flags that use holder data.
How the metric is computed
For each ERC-20 transfer event on chain 4663, adjust sender and recipient balances. The set of addresses with balance > 0 is the holder set. Blockscout also ranks addresses by balance so you can see the top-N distribution.
How to interpret it
Growing holder counts with declining top-N concentration is a healthier profile than growing counts with a flat concentration. A single address holding 50% of supply is a large risk regardless of the total holder number.
Caveats
Holder counts do not identify people, cannot prove sybil separation, and do not vouch for the token contract. LP pool contracts and burn addresses commonly appear in top-holder lists — recognise them before treating them as concentrated risk.
Concrete example
A chain-4663 memecoin lists 8,000 holders on Blockscout. The top 10 addresses hold 78% of supply, but 3 of those are recognisable: the burn address (0x…dead), the Uniswap v4 pool contract, and the deployer's locked LP wallet. The "effective" concentration among speculative holders is meaningfully lower than 78% — but only after that classification.
Frequently asked questions
Do holder counts identify individual people? No. Addresses are pseudonymous. One person can hold many addresses; one address can custody many people's balances. The count is address-based only. Is a token with more holders safer? Not by itself. Distribution matters more than raw count. A token with 10,000 holders where one address owns 90% is more concentrated than a 500-holder token with even distribution. Where do I read holder data for chain 4663? Blockscout at robinhoodchain.blockscout.com — the token page shows total holders and the top holders ranked by balance.
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.
- Robinhood Chain Blockscout explorer— holder enumeration for chain-4663 tokens
- ERC-20 token standard (ethereum.org)— canonical source for Transfer event semantics
- Robinhood Chain documentation— chain 4663 identity for holder data
Trade Robinhood Chain like a pro
Screener, live pairs and one-tap execution — all built for chain 4663.