Overview
The dRPC Data & Wallet API is a comprehensive REST API designed for developers building wallets, portfolio trackers, dApps, and analytic dashboards. It provides instant access to aggregated, human-readable on-chain data across multiple networks without the need to maintain complex indexing infrastructure.
Raw RPC vs. Indexed Data
Standard RPC nodes are the backbone of Web3, providing the ultimate flexibility and raw access needed for deep blockchain interactions. However, when building user-facing apps that require aggregated data — like calculating historical DeFi PnL, fetching cross-chain balances, or filtering spam tokens—developers typically have to build and maintain custom indexing infrastructure on top of their RPCs.
The Solution: The dRPC Data & Wallet API acts as a powerful complement to your standard nodes. It handles the complex indexing layer for you, delivering instant, ready-to-use JSON responses for high-level portfolio queries so you can ship faster.
At a Glance
- Ready-to-use wallet & portfolio data via REST API
- Balances, transactions, DeFi positions & Wallet PnL
- 20k+ tokens, 8k+ DeFi protocols across all supported networks
- 35+ EVM chains and Solana
- DeFi & Staking historical rewards and Missed Yield data
Core Use Cases
1. Token Balances to build dApps
Build apps and wallets using Balances and Transactions data across 35+ EVM chains and Solana. Basic Web3 data can still be challenging—spam tokens, deep history, accurate pricing—but the Data API handles it all for high-load apps.
2. Retain DeFi users with a unified DeFi portfolio
Showing DeFi positions alongside standard token balances helps users track their entire portfolio in one wallet without needing to interact with dozens of different dApps.
3. Activation mechanics for Earn products
Use Missed Yield data to power smart CTAs like: "You could earn $3k more using Protocol X pools instead of Protocol Y (by holding assets)." This drives your revenue, especially if you have revenue-share contracts with specific protocols.
Ready to build?
Head over to the Quickstart (opens in a new tab) to make your first API call in under a minute.