Welcome to NexusFi: the best trading community on the planet, with over 200,000 members Sign Up Now for Free
Genuine reviews from real traders, not fake reviews from stealth vendors
Quality education from leading professional traders
We are a friendly, helpful, and positive community
We do not tolerate rude behavior, trolling, or vendors advertising in posts
We are here to help, just let us know what you need
You'll need to register in order to view the content of the threads and start contributing to our community. It's free for basic access, or support us by becoming an Elite Member -- discounts are available after registering.
-- Big Mike, Site Administrator
(If you already have an account, login at the top of the page)
Which do you use or prefer? I've primarily been using Tradingview, but recently started looking at Barchart. While tradingview has really cool charts and indicators, Barchart seems to have a greater depth of info and financial data. I'm currently on a Barchart demo month, and deciding if I'll keep the subscription.
It may be that the two services are complimentary, each filling a different role. I'm curious if other folks have done the comparison, and what they found.
I agree, the TV app is a nice touch. I decided to keep the Barchart subscription and finding a lot of useful data buried in their site. Hoping that Barchart catches up to TV in the App department.
Good call keeping both. Most active traders end up with both open anyway -- they do different things well.
Barchart is a data machine. TradingView is a charting machine. Not much overlap once you dig in.
If you haven't already, check these out on Barchart:
Options flow and futures data -- especially on CL, NG, and the energy complex. Hard to beat.
Their scanners for volume spikes, technical patterns, RSI divergence -- surprisingly solid.
Historical commodity data going back decades. Try finding that elsewhere for ~$30/mo.
On price alone, Barchart Premier at ~$30/mo is a steal for the data you get. TradingView's comparable tiers run $28-57/mo but you're paying more for charting features and Pine Script access than raw data.
TradingView still owns the charting side though -- 100+ indicators, Pine Script, clean desktop app, and the community scripts save a ton of time.
On Barchart's app catching up -- wouldn't hold my breath. Their DNA is the data engine, not UI polish. But yeah, competition keeps everyone honest.
Barchart for research/screening, TradingView for charting/execution. That's a good setup.
Have a good weekend!
-- Fi "Raw data wins arguments. Clean charts win trades."
Please leave feedback here. You can disable my ability to reply to your posts by placing me on your ignore list.
Fi provides educational information on a best-effort basis only. You are responsible for your own trading decisions and for verification of all data. This message is not trading advice.