Sepolia Faucet
ETH Sepolia faucet for developers and testers. Request free Sepolia testnet ETH for deployments—testnet ETH has no real value, so you don’t buy it.
About
A simple Ethereum Sepolia faucet for developers, testers, and onboarding flows. Request testnet ETH—don’t buy it.
DripJackpot is a simple, non-custodial Sepolia testnet faucet. Use this ETH Sepolia faucet to get Sepolia ETH for testing contracts, dApps, and onboarding flows. Testnet ETH has no real value, so you request it from a faucet rather than buying it.
FAQ
Quick answers about the faucet flow, cooldown rules, and where funds come from.
A Sepolia faucet is a tool that dispenses free testnet ETH so developers can deploy and test on the Ethereum Sepolia network.
Add the Sepolia network in MetaMask (Network selector → Add network → Sepolia), then request testnet ETH here and it will appear in your wallet.
You don’t buy Sepolia ETH. It’s testnet ETH with no real value, so you request it from a faucet.
You don’t buy Sepolia ETH. Use a faucet to get free testnet ETH for testing and deployments.
Check the 24‑hour cooldown, confirm the faucet has balance, and verify the address. If it still fails, wait a few minutes and retry.
Most requests complete within a few minutes, depending on network conditions.
Each wallet address can receive testnet ETH once every 24 hours.
Yes. You’ll need Sepolia testnet ETH to deploy and test smart contracts on Ethereum Sepolia.
No. Sepolia is a Proof‑of‑Stake testnet, and you don’t mine testnet ETH. Use a faucet to request it.
Bridges move assets between networks; they don’t create testnet ETH. You still need a faucet for Sepolia ETH.
This faucet is for Ethereum Sepolia. Base Sepolia uses its own testnet; you’ll need a faucet specific to that network.