Your Lightning Node, in the cloud.
Powerful Lightning Network features, simplified for everyone.
Get a memorable Lightning address for receiving payments from any wallet or app.
Connect to hundreds of apps with the NWC protocol. Send and receive seamlessly.
Close channels to convert your Lightning balance back to on-chain Bitcoin.
Open channels to convert your on-chain Bitcoin into Lightning channels.
Get inbound liquidity immediately to start receiving payments right away.
Create temporary nodes for maximum privacy. Delete when done.
Learn Lightning Network concepts with built-in help and documentation.
View comprehensive transaction history and channel performance data.
Access your Lightning node from any browser - no app stores or downloads required.
Get discoverable by the network so other nodes can open channels directly to you.
I want to… | Price (sats) | Approx. USD |
---|---|---|
Start a Node | 10,000 sats | $11.33 |
Inbound Channel size: 500,000 satoshis |
≈ 15,000 sats* | $16.99 |
Guaranteed Uptime |
1 Month
20,000 sats $22.66
6 Months
75,000 sats $84.96
1 Year
125,000 sats $141.60 |
*Inbound channel fee varies with on-chain network conditions; shown value assumes 6 – 8 sat/vByte.
Want a free solution? Use Rizful to get on the Lightning Network for free.
Rizful Node runs in a web browser, and will work well on any reasonably modern device. iPhone, iPad, Android, Linux, Mac, Windows, Chromebook -- Rizful Node works well on both small screens and big screens.
The Lightning Network, used correctly, can be powerful for privacy. Rizful Nodes are designed to be disposable. Need to move some satoshis, privately and securely? Spin up a node in seconds. Get inbound. Open channels, close channels, or allow other nodes to open channels to you. When you're done, quickly close all your channels, withdraw your funds, and delete the node.
Getting inbound capacity is a common problem for new Lightning nodes. Rizful Node makes it super-easy, and instantly fast, to get inbound capacity.
Big Tech, and their buddies in the banking and credit card industries, want you to be trapped in their "walled garden," where you're forced to give up your data and allow surveillance of all your activity. Rizful Node is 100% web-based and doesn't require Apple or Google's permission. And we don't accept credit cards!
Nostr Wallet Connect is a new and experimental protocol for connecting Lightning Nodes with apps and websites. Rizful Node fully implements the specification. Be careful with "send & receive" NWC connections -- only use "send & receive" connections with apps and websites you trust.
Get an @rizful.com
Lightning address that you can use to receive payments. The Lightning address standard isn't perfect, but it is widely supported and works well with Rizful Node.
Rizful Node is designed for use in the classroom. Get your students started immediately with their own nodes. Use the extensive (and entertaining) inline help to gradually introduce Lightning's concepts, including subjects like invoices, detailed node data, and fiat currencies, as they use their node.
Many operations on the Lightning Network have a confusing property: Sometimes they are super-fast, and sometimes they take forever. This makes it hard to give users a consistent and understandable experience. We've done the work to track "operations in progress" in a way that makes sense to both new users and experienced node-runners.
You can see detailed transaction data, channel data, and other vitals about your node directly from the History menu. Rizful Node doesn't hide anything from you: You've got a full node, and you can learn a lot just by making a few transactions and looking at the data those transactions produce.
Running your own node, on your own hardware, is definitely cool. If you're technically minded, we recommend this tutorial for running your own LND node in Docker. But there is a well-known problem: Most individuals' home internet connections are not well suited for running a Lightning node. Home networks often go offline. Home computers often sleep, or are turned off at the wrong time. In comparison: Rizful Nodes are hosted in the cloud and are optimized for low-latency, 24/7/365 connectivity.
New users, even if they are technical, are impatient. It's no fun to sign up for a service, and then wait 30 minutes while your node is syncing. Rizful Nodes are all "pre-warmed" and ready to go right away -- no syncing required! You can literally open a channel and start sending satoshis within a few seconds of signing up for Rizful Node.
Without guidance, it's easy to do the wrong thing with on-chain transactions. Ever withdrawn the wrong amount of on-chain BTC, leaving a tiny balance that could not be moved? Ever opened a Lightning channel that was too small to economically close? Rizful Node has you covered, with lots of validations and suggestions to keep you on the right track.
Each Rizful Node comes with a public URI, which (if you want) will allow any other node on the network to connect to your node, and open channels. Each node also comes with a Nostr public/private key pair, for integrating with the decentralized web.
RECOMMENDED: Use our Nostr Onboarding Guide to get your Rizful Node and your Nostr identity set up simultaneously.
Always keep significant amounts of BTC offline, in a self-custody hardware wallet. Never trust websites, exchanges, or apps with high balances.
Two-factor authentication, using Google Authenticator (or similar) is required for all Rizful Node users with balances above 100,000 satoshis. This is a powerful and widely-tested security strategy that should serve to keep bad actors out of your Rizful Node.
But please understand the tradeoffs we've made: While studying the Lightning design space, we've realized there is a big, nasty problem with giving users a seed phrase and assuming they could restore their node at any time: Most users won't be able to successfully restore their node! Lightning's "static channel backup" restore model is confusing, even for experienced node-runners. Do "an SCB" wrong, and you'll lose all your sats. We think that giving new users a seed phrase, and asking them to take responsibility for all backup and restore.... that's a challenging route. So we've made a big tradeoff: We store the encrypted backups and retain the ability to restore nodes in the event of hardware failure. This should work well for new users and users with small balances, but is NOT designed for large production-scale nodes with high balances.
Rizful Node was created by the team behind The Megalith Node, one of the biggest public routing nodes on the Lightning Network. We have a lot of experience running high-performance, high-uptime nodes, and we've built LSPs (Lightning Service Providers) for some of the bigger players in Lightning. Rizful Node is the result of combining this Lightning expertise with about 10 years of prior experience running high-traffic software-as-a-service websites.
The Lightning Network is growing, and, in the coming years, we will need hundreds of thousands of developers and business people who understand how it works, and how to use it.
Nearly everyone who has taken the time to try to understand how the Lightning Network works has discovered the same thing: The behavior of the network is complex, but once you start running your own node, you quickly get to a point where you "understand how it works."
We envision the following education use case for Rizful Node: A semester-long course for learners aged 15 and above, including those in secondary education, higher education, or adult learning programs.
Each student sits with a laptop, Chromebook, or tablet. (Rizful Node is entirely web-based, so any device will work.) Each student signs up for Rizful Node, and starts his/her own Rizful Node.
The class begins with each student visiting a Testnet4 faucet, where they freely acquire Testnet4 tokens (tBTC).
The instructor then begins with the basics of Bitcoin -- on-chain deposits, withdrawals, transaction fees, and block confirmations. For every lesson, there is a direct "practical exercise".
For example, while learning about deposits and withdrawals, the associated "practical exercise" would be: Each student depositing tBTC into their node from a tBTC faucet, choosing a random classmate, and sending an on-chain transaction to that classmate's Rizful Node. Both students then watch that transaction on a block explorer until the transaction is confirmed.
Moving on to Lightning, separate modules will cover opening channels, closing channels, sending payments, receiving payments, and more. Rizful Node exposes a TON of data about EVERY transaction, so this is where the class could go into detail, and discuss the data produced by each user's node (shown in Rizful Node's history menu.)
"Practical exercises" for this section will be actually performing each action on the Lightning Network: open channel, close channel, make invoice, pay invoice, etc.
Finally, a module on Nostr: Students set up Rizful Node Nostr Wallet Connect connections to few recommended apps and websites, and experiment with Nostr. This is where Testnet4 usage might get challenging, so at this point each student might need a "mainchain" node, maybe with one Lightning channel, and 1,000 satoshis of outbound capacity.
Overall, this will be a very inexpensive to run and very hands-on course of study. For each student, it will build confidence around BTC on-chain, Lightning Network, and NOSTR operations and theory.