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Top 10 Trading Terminals on Hyperliquid
Hyperliquid has become the dominant on-chain venue for perpetual futures, but most active traders no longer execute on the default exchange UI. As of 2026, around 40% of daily active traders on Hyperliquid use a third-party terminal: a frontend, mobile app, CLI, or copy-trading platform that sits on top of HyperCore via Hyperliquid's Builder Codes program.
This guide ranks the top 10 trading terminals on Hyperliquid for 2026, covering the official native UI, professional desktop terminals, mobile apps, copy-trading platforms, and open-source self-hosted clients. Each is built on the same on-chain orderbook; the differentiation is in execution speed, order types, integrations, and UX.
Key Takeaways
Hyperliquid traders have a rich ecosystem of third-party terminals competing on execution quality, advanced order types, and specialized workflows.
Builder Codes let any frontend collect a small fee per trade while routing to Hyperliquid's native orderbook: the user keeps custody, the terminal earns volume.
Choosing the right terminal depends on your workflow: discretionary desktop, mobile-first, CLI, copy trading, or open-source self-hosted.
Why Trading Terminals Matter on Hyperliquid
Hyperliquid's L1 settles trades in under a second with no gas, but the default web UI is intentionally minimalist. Terminals add the layer that professional traders expect: deep orderbook visualization, customizable layouts, advanced order types (TWAP, scale, limit chase), multi-account management, programmable hotkeys, and integrations with charts, news, and other venues.
Because terminals route through Builder Codes, they earn a small share of trading fees while users keep self-custody and transparent on-chain settlement. This has produced a genuinely competitive ecosystem of frontends rather than one dominant interface.
How We Picked the Top 10
Active development and stability through 2026
Native Hyperliquid integration (HyperCore orderbook access via Builder Codes or direct API)
Differentiated workflow: desktop power user, mobile, copy trading, multi-venue, or open source
Trader adoption signals (cumulative volume, user counts, community traction)
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What to Look For in a Hyperliquid Terminal
Execution & Order Types
TWAP, scale, limit-chase, and conditional orders separate a serious trading terminal from a dressed-up wallet. Look for sub-100ms order routing and reliable WebSocket feeds.
Multi-Account Management
Managing multiple Hyperliquid wallets from a single window is a major productivity boost for prop traders, market makers, and anyone running multi-strategy books.
Charting & Data
Most top terminals integrate TradingView; the differentiator is how cleanly the chart connects to order entry (drag-and-drop TP/SL, click-to-trade, position overlays).
Custody Model
All terminals on this list keep custody with the user. Most use either browser-stored encrypted API keys or wallet-signature flows (with Turnkey-style enclaves common for mobile).
Risks & Limitations
Third-Party Frontend Risk
A terminal can ship a bad UI update, leak an API key, or go offline. Self-custody mitigates fund loss, but execution can still be disrupted.
Builder Fees
Most terminals charge a small builder fee on top of Hyperliquid's native fees (typically 0.5 to 5 bps). Always check the fee schedule before committing to a tool for size.
Feature Gaps Across Tools
No single terminal does everything well. Mobile apps lack CLIs; CLIs lack mobile; copy-trading platforms lack pro charting. Many active traders use 2 or 3 terminals depending on the situation.
Summary
Hyperliquid's success at the protocol layer has produced a healthy market of competing trading terminals, each optimized for a different style of trader. The 2026 top 10 below covers the full surface area: native UI, desktop pro terminals, mobile apps, copy-trading platforms, multi-venue terminals, and open-source clients. Pick based on your workflow, not just brand recognition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Hyperliquid trading terminal?
A trading terminal is a frontend interface that submits orders to Hyperliquid's on-chain orderbook (HyperCore) on the user's behalf. Terminals add features like advanced orders, charting, multi-account management, copy trading, or news integration that the default exchange UI doesn't offer. They typically connect via Hyperliquid's Builder Codes program.
Are these terminals custodial?
No. Every terminal on this list keeps custody with the user, either through browser-encrypted API keys or wallet-signature flows. Funds remain on Hyperliquid and settle on-chain.
What are Builder Codes?
Builder Codes are Hyperliquid's official program for third-party frontends. Users approve a max fee per builder via an on-chain ApproveBuilderFee action, and the terminal earns that fee per fill while routing to Hyperliquid's orderbook. Maximum fees are 0.1% on perpetuals and 1% on spot, and a user can approve up to 10 different builders.
Do I need to KYC to use these terminals?
No. None of the terminals on this list require KYC for standard usage. Some advanced features (fiat ramps, certain card programs) may add KYC for specific flows.
Can I run more than one terminal at the same time?
Yes. Hyperliquid allows multiple builders per user. Many active traders use a desktop terminal for execution, a mobile app for travel, and a copy-trading platform on the side, all hitting the same Hyperliquid account.







