Robinhood’s 2026 Rollercoaster: Crypto Dives, Everything Else Rises (Except Your Blood Pressure)

Robinhood’s Q1 2026 was like a game of Jenga: knock over crypto, and the rest of the tower just keeps stacking higher. Total revenue hit $1.07 billion, up 15%, while crypto income crumbled by 47%. Let’s unpack this financial circus.

Robinhood ended Q1 2026 with a yawn-worthy 15% revenue increase, landing at $1.07 billion. But here’s the twist: crypto, which once danced on the edge of a knife, now limped in at $134 million-a 47% slump that would make a paraglider blush. Fortunately, other segments stepped up to play the hero, or at least the sidekick.

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Options, Event Contracts, and the Art of Squeezing Every Drop

Transaction-based revenue surged 7% to $623 million. Options revenue? Up 8% to $260 million. Equities? A 46% leap to $82 million. But the real star was “other transaction revenue,” which rocketed 320% to $147 million. Turns out, event contracts are the unsung heroes of Q1-like the guy who always wins the office sweepstakes but never tells anyone.

Net interest revenue also had a solid day, rising 24% to $359 million. Robinhood credited this to “interest-earning assets”-a fancy way of saying they’re good at keeping your money in places that pay them. Lower short-term rates and less securities lending activity tried to crash the party, but the party kept going.

Other revenue streams? A 57% jump to $85 million. Robinhood Gold subscriptions led the charge, growing 32% to $50 million. And guess what? Gold subscribers hit 4.3 million-because nothing says “premium” like paying extra to trade stocks on a phone.

– Vlad Tenev (@vladtenev)

User Growth: Because More People = More Data to Sell

Funded customers grew 6% to 27.4 million. Investment accounts? Up 8% to 29.1 million. Total platform assets ballooned 39% to $307 billion. Net deposits for the quarter? A tidy $17.7 billion, translating to a 22% annualized growth rate. If you’re keeping score, that’s like turning a loaf of bread into a bakery empire.

Average revenue per user climbed 8% to $157. Net income? A modest 3% increase to $346 million. Diluted EPS hit $0.38-up 3%, which is about as exciting as finding a penny on the sidewalk in 2026.

Robinhood’s cash hoard swelled to $5 billion. They also spent $250 million buying back shares-because what says “confidence” like throwing money at your own stock. The board gave themselves a $1.5 billion repurchase budget in March 2026. Generous, or just desperate?

Robinhood Q1 Revenue +15% YoY, Crypto Revenue -47%

Robinhood reported Q1 2026 revenue of $1.07 billion, up 15% year over year, with diluted EPS of $0.38, up 3%. Net deposits were $17.7 billion, representing a 22% annualized growth rate, and total platform assets rose 39% to $307…

– Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain)

Products, Global Ambitions, and a Card Named After a Metal

Robinhood didn’t just sit around counting money. They launched trust and custodial accounts, the Robinhood Platinum Card (because gold wasn’t exclusive enough), and Robinhood Social-a trading community feature for beta users. Meanwhile, Robinhood Chain, their Ethereum Layer 2 blockchain, processed 100 million transactions on its testnet. Impressive, unless you’re trying to remember what a Layer 2 even is.

On the global stage, they got in-principle approval from Singapore’s Monetary Authority. And in April, the U.S. Treasury made them the broker for Trump Accounts. Robinhood will build a standalone app for these-because nothing says “trust” like linking your name to a former president’s financials.

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2026-04-29 10:37