Commission-free brokerage that reshaped retail investing — and ignited a firestorm.
NASDAQ: HOODRobinhood Markets, Inc. is an American financial services company headquartered in Menlo Park, California. Founded in 2013 by Vlad Tenev and Baiju Bhatt, the company launched its mobile-first, commission-free trading platform in March 2015 with a singular mission: "to democratize finance for all."
The platform enables users to trade U.S.-listed equities, ETFs, options, and cryptocurrencies without traditional brokerage commissions. This disruptive pricing model forced legacy brokerages — including Charles Schwab, TD Ameritrade, and E*Trade — to eliminate their own trading fees in late 2019, fundamentally altering the retail brokerage landscape.
Robinhood went public on July 29, 2021, at a valuation of approximately $32 billion under ticker HOOD on NASDAQ. The IPO was notable for allocating a significant share of IPO stock directly to its own users.
Robinhood's financial trajectory has been a rollercoaster. After explosive 2020–2021 growth driven by meme-stock mania and pandemic-era retail trading, the company faced a brutal 2022 with plummeting revenue, user attrition, and a stock price that cratered over 80% from IPO highs. Since then, however, the company has executed a remarkable turnaround.
| Segment | 2023 | 2024 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transaction-Based Revenue | $785M | $1.41B | ↑ 80% |
| — Options | $486M | $706M | ↑ 45% |
| — Crypto | $126M | $358M | ↑ 184% |
| — Equities | $128M | $282M | ↑ 120% |
| Net Interest Revenue | $929M | $1.07B | ↑ 15% |
| Gold Subscriptions & Other | $149M | $470M | ↑ 215% |
HOOD debuted at $38 on IPO day (July 2021), briefly peaked near $85 in August 2021, then collapsed to under $7 by mid-2022 amid the broader tech selloff and crypto winter. The stock staged a recovery through 2023–2024, climbing back above $50 by early 2025 on the strength of profitability, crypto revenue resurgence, and product expansion. The stock has roughly 8x'd from its 2022 lows.
What began as a single-feature stock trading app has evolved into a multi-product financial platform. Robinhood's product velocity accelerated dramatically from 2023 onward.
The $5/month (later raised) subscription tier is Robinhood's most successful cross-sell. Gold subscribers receive higher interest on uninvested cash (currently 4%+), professional research from Morningstar, Level II market data, larger instant deposits, and margin trading. Gold subscribers exceeded 2.6 million by late 2024, making it one of the fastest-growing fintech subscriptions.
A 3% cashback credit card for Gold members with no annual fee (beyond the Gold subscription), no foreign transaction fees, and travel perks. The waitlist exceeded 1 million users before launch. The card is issued by Coastal Community Bank and runs on the Visa network.
Traditional and Roth IRA accounts with a unique 1% (3% for Gold) match on contributions — essentially free money on retirement deposits. This feature is a strong user acquisition lever targeting long-term investors.
Crypto has become a strategic pillar for Robinhood. The company first launched cryptocurrency trading in 2018 with Bitcoin and Ethereum, and has steadily expanded its token offerings. Crypto revenue surged 184% year-over-year in 2024, driven by Bitcoin's rally past $100K and renewed retail interest.
In June 2024, Robinhood announced the acquisition of Bitstamp, one of the world's oldest cryptocurrency exchanges, for approximately $200 million. The deal gave Robinhood:
Robinhood launched a standalone crypto wallet (Web3 Wallet) enabling users to self-custody their crypto assets, swap tokens, and interact with DeFi protocols. This was a significant shift from its earlier custodial-only model and addressed longstanding user criticism.
Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), Dogecoin (DOGE), Cardano (ADA), Avalanche (AVAX), Shiba Inu (SHIB), Polygon (MATIC), Chainlink (LINK), Uniswap (UNI), Stellar (XLM), Pepe (PEPE), and others. The token list has expanded steadily, though Robinhood remains more conservative than dedicated crypto exchanges.
Born in Bulgaria in 1987, Tenev immigrated to the U.S. at age 5. He studied mathematics at Stanford where he met co-founder Baiju Bhatt. Tenev previously worked in finance building high-frequency trading systems in New York before founding Robinhood. He became the public face of the company during the GameStop hearings and has evolved from a relatively quiet tech founder into an aggressive product-focused CEO.
Under Tenev's leadership since 2023, Robinhood has dramatically accelerated its product roadmap, launching futures, index options, the Gold Card, prediction markets, and AI tools. His stated vision is to make Robinhood "the most trusted and most culturally relevant financial services brand."
| Name | Role | Background |
|---|---|---|
| Vlad Tenev | CEO & Co-Founder | Stanford Math, HFT background |
| Jason Warnick | CFO | Former Amazon VP of Finance |
| Dan Gallagher | Chief Legal Officer | Former SEC Commissioner |
| Johann Kerbrat | GM, Robinhood Crypto | Former crypto exchange exec |
| Deepak Rao | VP, Spending & Banking | Former Google, fintech veteran |
Robinhood underwent significant layoffs in 2022, cutting roughly 30% of its workforce (approximately 1,000 employees) as post-pandemic trading volumes declined. The company has since stabilized at around 2,800 employees and shifted toward a "lean and ship fast" engineering culture. Tenev has publicly emphasized product velocity — Robinhood's pace of feature launches from 2023–2025 has been among the fastest in fintech.
No company in modern fintech has been as polarizing as Robinhood. Its controversies have shaped regulatory debates, inspired congressional hearings, and fueled an entire culture war between retail traders and Wall Street.
In late January 2021, retail traders on Reddit's r/WallStreetBets coordinated a massive short squeeze on GameStop (GME), driving the stock from ~$20 to nearly $500 in days. When Robinhood restricted buying of GME and other "meme stocks" on January 28, it triggered a firestorm of outrage.
Robinhood's primary revenue model involves routing customer orders to market makers (primarily Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial) in exchange for per-share payments. Critics argue this creates a conflict of interest — Robinhood's incentive is to maximize order flow, not necessarily to get customers the best execution.
| Year | Agency | Issue | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | SEC | Misleading customers about revenue sources | $65M settlement |
| 2021 | FINRA | Outages, misleading info, options approvals | $70M fine |
| 2022 | NYDFS | AML/cybersecurity failures (crypto) | $30M settlement |
| 2024 | SEC | Wells Notice re: crypto operations | Pending |
Robinhood faced criticism for "gamifying" investing — confetti animations (since removed), simple UI, and easy options access were accused of encouraging reckless trading among inexperienced users. A 20-year-old user's suicide in 2020 after seeing an apparent -$730,000 balance (which was misleading) led to intense scrutiny and UI changes.
Robinhood operates at the intersection of retail brokerage, crypto exchange, and neobank — competing with different players across each vertical.
| Competitor | Strengths vs. Robinhood | Weaknesses vs. Robinhood |
|---|---|---|
| Charles Schwab | Massive AUM ($8T+), full banking, research, advisory | Stodgy UX, older demographic, slow product cycles |
| Fidelity | Best execution quality, retirement dominance, no PFOF | App UX trails Robinhood, weaker crypto offering |
| Webull | Advanced charting, extended hours, strong international | Smaller U.S. user base, less brand recognition |
| SoFi | Full banking suite, student loans, credit cards | Trading is secondary product, less trading depth |
| Coinbase | Crypto depth (200+ tokens), institutional, global | Higher fees, no stocks/options, narrower product |
| Public.com | No PFOF (tipping model), social features, Treasuries | Much smaller scale, limited brand awareness |
| Interactive Brokers | Global markets, professional tools, lowest margin rates | Complex UI, not beginner-friendly |
Robinhood's public perception is deeply divided. It remains simultaneously one of the most loved and most hated brands in retail finance.
On r/WallStreetBets, r/stocks, and r/investing, sentiment toward Robinhood is complex:
Composite score across four pillars
| Pillar | Score | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Innovation | 8/10 | Relentless product launches — futures, index options, Gold Card, prediction markets, AI tools. Among the fastest iterators in fintech. |
| Stability | 6/10 | Now profitable and well-capitalized, but revenue remains tied to volatile trading volumes and crypto cycles. PFOF regulatory risk persists. |
| Sentiment | 6/10 | Polarized. Strong product love offset by lingering GameStop distrust. Improving as Gold features deliver real value. |
| Momentum | 8/10 | Revenue +58% YoY, stock 8x off lows, Gold subs surging, Bitstamp acquired, expanding into new verticals. Clear upward trajectory. |
Robinhood enters 2026 in the strongest position in its history. For the first time, the company has durable profitability, a diversified product suite, and a clear international expansion strategy. But significant risks remain.
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Last Updated: March 22, 2026
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