Add Gnosis Chain network (RPC + Chain ID 100)
Configure Gnosis Chain correctly so your wallet displays balances and signs transactions on the correct chain. Gnosis Chain uses Chain ID 100.
This is a practical, security-first guide to Gnosis Chain: how to set up the network in your wallet (RPC / Chain ID), how gas works (xDAI), how to bridge assets to Gnosis Chain safely, how to verify transactions on explorers, and how to fix the most common “missing funds / wrong network / token not showing” issues.
Configure Gnosis Chain correctly so your wallet displays balances and signs transactions on the correct chain. Gnosis Chain uses Chain ID 100.
Transaction fees on Gnosis Chain are paid in xDAI. Without gas, you can’t swap, approve, revoke, or recover.
Use official or reputable bridging routes, confirm destination chain and token, and start with a small test transfer to validate your setup.
Wallet UIs can lag. Use Gnosis explorers to confirm tx status, token contract addresses, and balances.
Gnosis Chain is an EVM-compatible blockchain designed for fast, low-fee transactions. It’s widely used for stablecoin transfers, DeFi, and on-chain apps that benefit from predictable fees. The operational keys are: correct network setup (Chain ID 100), keeping xDAI for gas, and verifying everything via explorers.
Low-fee transfers, DeFi activity, and app usage with familiar EVM wallets and tooling.
Wrong-network mistakes, token spoofing, and risky approvals. Use verified contracts and revoke stale allowances.
The most important Gnosis Chain settings are: Chain ID 100, currency xDAI, and reliable explorers. Use official docs or a trusted registry to add RPC parameters.
| Parameter | Value | Why it matters on Gnosis Chain |
|---|---|---|
| Network name | Gnosis Chain | Prevents wrong-chain confusion |
| Chain ID | 100 | Critical for correct signing & routing |
| Gas token | xDAI | You need it to transact and recover |
| Explorers | gnosis.blockscout.com / gnosisscan.io | Verification source of truth |
| Network registry | chainlist.org/chain/100 | Quick add + cross-check settings |
On Gnosis Chain, transaction fees are paid in xDAI. Treat xDAI as your operational fuel: approvals, swaps, bridging steps, and recovery actions all require gas.
If a token doesn’t appear in your wallet after using Gnosis Chain, assume it’s a visibility issue first. Verify the token transfer on the explorer, then add the token by contract address only if it is verified.
| Check | What to do | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Correct chain | Switch wallet to Gnosis Chain | Wrong chain = wrong balances |
| Explorer proof | Check your address on Blockscout/GnosisScan | Explorer is the truth |
| Correct contract | Use verified token contract address | Prevents spoof/scam tokens |
DeFi on Gnosis Chain is EVM-like: approvals grant spending permission, swaps trade tokens, and risk comes mostly from approvals and bad contracts.
| Action | What it does | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Approve token | Lets a contract spend your token | Unlimited approvals to unknown contracts |
| Swap | Trades token A for token B | Swapping spoofed tokens / wrong contracts |
Use these official and high-quality references for Gnosis Chain setup, verification, bridging, and security hygiene:
Gnosis Chain is an EVM-compatible blockchain optimized for low fees and fast confirmations, widely used for stablecoin transfers and DeFi apps.
Gnosis Chain uses Chain ID 100. Confirm via official docs or Chainlist before adding the network.
Fees on Gnosis Chain are paid in xDAI. Keep a gas buffer to handle approvals, swaps, bridging, and recovery actions.
Use Blockscout (gnosis.blockscout.com) and/or GnosisScan to verify tx status, token transfers, and contract addresses.
Most common causes: wallet is on the wrong network, the token isn’t added to your wallet UI, or you used the wrong token contract address. Verify on the explorer first.
Add Gnosis Chain from official sources, fund a small amount of xDAI for gas, do a small test transaction, and verify it on Blockscout before scaling up.
A common official portal is bridge.gnosischain.com. Bookmark it and cross-check from official docs to reduce phishing risk.
Often yes—ERC-20 tokens usually require an approval transaction before a dApp/DEX can spend them. Avoid unlimited approvals for unknown contracts.
Use an allowance tool (e.g., Revoke.cash) while connected to Gnosis Chain, and revoke approvals you no longer need to reduce risk.
This is usually wallet/RPC caching. Trust the explorer, reconnect the wallet, refresh token lists, or switch RPC endpoints using trusted sources.
Bridges can have multi-step finality and separate confirmations on source and destination chains. Check the tx hash on the origin chain and verify destination state on the Gnosis explorer.
Generally avoid it unless the bridge explicitly supports exchange routing. Use a self-custody wallet you control for predictable results.
Do a test transfer, verify on explorer, keep an xDAI gas buffer, verify token contracts, and save tx hashes for troubleshooting.
xDAI is used as the gas token for transactions on Gnosis Chain, while GNO is a governance-related asset in the broader Gnosis ecosystem. For day-to-day fees, you primarily need xDAI.
Use docs.gnosischain.com or trusted registries like Chainlist (Chain ID 100). Avoid random RPC lists from unknown sources.