The Grid Sandbox environment provides a complete testing environment for ramp operations, allowing you to validate on-ramp and off-ramp flows without using real money or cryptocurrency.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://ramps-sync-country-coverage-2026-06.mintlify.app/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Sandbox overview
Sandbox mirrors production behavior while using simulated funds:- Same API endpoints: Use identical API calls as production
- Simulated funding: Mock bank transfers and crypto deposits
- Real webhooks: Receive actual webhook notifications
- No real money: All transactions use test funds
- Isolated environment: Sandbox data never affects production
Sandbox is perfect for development, testing, and demonstrating ramp
functionality before going live.
Getting started
Create sandbox credentials
- Log into the Grid dashboard
- Navigate to Settings → API Keys
- Click Create API Key and select Sandbox environment
- Save your API key ID and secret securely
Configure sandbox webhook
Set up a webhook endpoint for sandbox notifications:Testing on-ramps (Fiat → Crypto)
Simulate the complete on-ramp flow in sandbox:Step 1: Create a test customer
In sandbox, customers are automatically approved for testing.
Step 2: Create an external account for the destination wallet
Step 3: Create an on-ramp quote (just-in-time funding)
Step 4: Simulate funding
Use the sandbox endpoint to simulate receiving the fiat payment. Reference the quote by ID and specify the funding currency:currencyCode must match the funding-source currency on the quote.
currencyAmount is optional — when omitted, the amount is derived from the
quote.Step 5: Verify completion
Within seconds, you’ll receive a webhook notification confirming the on-ramp completed:Testing off-ramps (Crypto → Fiat)
Simulate the complete off-ramp flow:Step 1: Fund internal account with crypto
Simulate a Bitcoin deposit to the customer’s internal account using the sandbox funding endpoint:InternalAccount:btc001 with your actual BTC internal account ID.
You’ll receive an
INTERNAL_ACCOUNT.BALANCE_UPDATED webhook showing the updated balance.Step 2: Create external bank account
In sandbox, you can use special account number patterns to test different scenarios. The last 3 digits determine the behavior: 002 (insufficient funds), 003 (account closed), 004 (transfer rejected), 005 (timeout/delayed failure). Any other ending succeeds normally. See “Testing transfer failures” below for details.
Step 3: Create and execute off-ramp quote
In sandbox, off-ramp conversions complete instantly. In production, bank
settlement may take 1-3 business days.
Testing transfer failures
External account test patterns
The flows for creating external accounts in sandbox are the same as in production. The last 3 digits of an external account’s primary identifier (account number, IBAN, CLABE, Spark wallet address, etc.) determine the test scenario when that account is used in transfers or quotes. For identifiers with a domain part (e.g. PIX email keys), append the test digits to the username portion — for example,testuser.002@pix.com.br.
| Suffix | Behavior |
|---|---|
| 002 | Insufficient funds — transfer fails immediately |
| 003 | Account closed/invalid — transfer fails immediately |
| 004 | Transfer rejected — bank rejects the transfer |
| 005 | Timeout/delayed failure — stays pending ~30s, then fails |
| Any other | Success — transfer completes normally |
Beneficiary name verification
For account types that support beneficiary name verification, you can simulate different verification outcomes in sandbox. Use account identifiers with a1xx suffix to trigger verification scenarios (this range is reserved for verification and does not conflict with transfer or quote test patterns):
| Suffix | beneficiaryVerificationStatus | Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| 102 | NOT_MATCHED | Account is valid but name does not match |
| 103 | PARTIAL_MATCH | Account is valid, name is a fuzzy match |
| 104 | PENDING | Verification still in progress |
| 105 | (error) | Returns 400 — invalid account |
| 106 | UNSUPPORTED | Payment rail does not support name verification |
| 107 | CHECKED_BY_RECEIVING_FI | Verification deferred to receiving financial institution (e.g., ACH) |
| Any other | MATCHED | Account is valid, name matches exactly |
Test scenarios
Successful conversions
The complete on-ramp and off-ramp flows described in the sections above demonstrate successful conversion scenarios. For quick reference: On-ramp test (USD → BTC):- Create customer and quote with payment instructions
- Use
/sandbox/sendto simulate funding - Verify completion via webhook
- Fund BTC internal account with
/sandbox/internal-accounts/{accountId}/fund - Create external bank account (use default account number for success)
- Create and execute quote
- Verify completion via webhook
Failed conversions
Test error scenarios systematically using the magic account patterns: 1. Test external account insufficient funds (002):Global Account magic values
The Grid sandbox lets you exercise Global Account auth flows without moving real money. Email OTP uses the fixed sandbox code000000. Passkey auth can use the same browser WebAuthn ceremony as production, and signed wallet actions can use the same decrypted session signing key and Grid-Wallet-Signature stamp as production. OAuth uses JWT-shaped sandbox OIDC tokens: sandbox skips real IdP signature verification, but still validates token claims, freshness, credential identity, and verify-time nonce binding.
Sandbox-only compatibility values are still available for some flows, but they do not exercise the production-shaped client implementation. Authentication failures return 401 UNAUTHORIZED with a reason field that names the specific check that failed. A malformed OIDC JWT can return 400 INVALID_INPUT before authentication starts.
Email OTP code
Pass000000 as the body otp on POST /auth/credentials/{id}/verify when the credential type is EMAIL_OTP. The sandbox skips OTP delivery and accepts this value as a valid response to the issued challenge.
401 UNAUTHORIZED with reason: "Invalid OTP code".
Passkey WebAuthn ceremony
For new sandbox integrations, use the same WebAuthn calls you plan to use in production.Create a WebAuthn credential
Generate your own WebAuthn registration challenge and call
navigator.credentials.create().Register the passkey
Register the passkey with
POST /auth/credentials, passing the challenge and attestation returned by the browser.Request a challenge
Reauthenticate with
POST /auth/credentials/{id}/challenge, passing the P-256 clientPublicKey that Grid should seal the session signing key to.Run the browser assertion
Pass the returned
challenge into navigator.credentials.get() using the returned credentialId in allowCredentials.encryptedSessionSigningKey, sealed to the clientPublicKey, just like production.
The legacy sandbox-only assertion signature
sandbox-valid-passkey-signature is still accepted for compatibility, but it skips WebAuthn verification and should not be used for production-shaped sandbox tests.OAuth (OIDC) token
OAuth does not use a fixed magic token in sandbox. Pass a JWT-shaped OIDC token asoidcToken. The JWT signature segment can be a dummy value, but the payload must look like a real ID token.
For POST /auth/credentials with type: "OAUTH", the sandbox token must include:
iss: a supported issuer, such ashttps://accounts.google.com,accounts.google.com, orhttps://appleid.apple.comaud: a non-empty string, or a single-element string arraysub: a non-empty subject identifier for the useriat: a numeric issued-at timestamp no more than 60 seconds before the request, with 5 seconds of clock skew allowedexp: a numeric expiration timestamp later than the request time
iss, aud, and sub. On POST /auth/credentials/{id}/verify, the fresh oidcToken must carry the same iss, aud, and sub as the credential being verified. It must also include nonce equal to sha256(clientPublicKey), where clientPublicKey is the exact hex public key sent in the verify request.
The old literal
sandbox-valid-oidc-token is no longer accepted. Use a freshly generated sandbox JWT for both OAuth credential registration and OAuth verification. Production requires a real ID token from your provider and verifies the provider signature.Wallet signature header
After verifying an auth credential, decryptencryptedSessionSigningKey with the private key matching the clientPublicKey you supplied on verify or refresh. Use the decrypted session signing key to build a Turnkey API-key stamp over the exact payloadToSign string returned by Grid, then pass that full stamp as the Grid-Wallet-Signature HTTP header on signed flows:
POST /auth/credentials(add-additional-credential signed retry)DELETE /auth/credentials/{id}(revoke credential)DELETE /auth/sessions/{id}(revoke session)POST /internal-accounts/{id}/export(export wallet)PATCH /internal-accounts/{id}(update wallet privacy)POST /quotes/{quoteId}/execute(when source is an embedded wallet)
This example uses the sample signer in the Grid API repo’s scripts directory. See the scripts README for setup, or replace
SIGN with your own Turnkey API-key stamp implementation.The legacy sandbox-only
Grid-Wallet-Signature: sandbox-valid-signature value is still accepted for compatibility. Use a real session stamp when you want the client implementation to match production.Moving to Production
When you’re ready to move to production:- Generate production API tokens in the dashboard
- Swap those credentials for the sandbox credentials in your environment variables
- Remove any sandbox-specific test patterns from your code
- Configure production webhook endpoints
- Test with small amounts first
Next steps
- Webhooks - Handle real-time notifications
- Fiat-to-Crypto Conversion - Implement production flows
- Self-Custody Wallets - Advanced wallet integration
- Platform Configuration - Configure production settings
- API Reference - Complete API documentation