Winners Summary
The best stock chart website - TradingView
Company |
Overall |
TradingView
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TradingView offers the ultimate clean and flexible experience for looking at stock charts. It’s no wonder many of the best stock brokers license TradingView charts and widgets for their own sites.
Charts are exquisitely detailed and the service is less expensive than rival StockCharts.com (more on that below) if you feel you need a premium package. There are user delights throughout the site — for example, how the ticker box remembers the symbols you’ve already entered. It’s easier than creating a watch list.
The site hosts an active community passionately sharing ideas and advice on tons of chat channels. Sophisticated traders will appreciate the wide variety of techniques discussed in chats, while novices will be exposed to many traders’ opinions and forecasts. There’s also a killer mobile app. It has the same smooth charts as the website and it’s easy to mark them up, which is quite a feat on a phone.
As with StockCharts, you can use TradingView as your trading platform if you link it to your brokerage account. Some of the brokers that can link with TradingView include TradeStation, Interactive Brokers, Tradier, and Ally Invest.
For an in-depth look at its range of features and pricing, visit our full TradingView review.
- Pros: Most flexible stock charts, excellent community features including chat rooms, easy sharing, and over 100 charting tools and indicators included.
- Cons: Pop-up ads.
TradingView gallery
Best for technical analysis education - StockCharts.com
Company |
Overall |
StockCharts.com
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StockCharts.com is one of the original online charting services. It continues to offer its long-established SharpCharts suite, but its newer Advanced Charting Platform, or ACP, is where you’ll find best in class ease of customization. Regardless of whether you prefer ACP or SharpCharts, too many features are locked behind a paywall.
Even with a restrictive paywall, there’s still plenty of value to be found. Some of the best technical analysts in the industry can be found in the market commentary and education sections. Scouting around the site yielded articles and videos from famed technicians Tom McClellan, Larry Williams, Greg Morris and David Keller, among others. Also available – but behind the paywall – are posts from the legendary Martin Pring and John Murphy.
- Pros: ACP is powerful, intuitive and attractive. Articles and video content comes from the Who’s Who of technical analysis. Premium members can open and link a Tradier brokerage account to execute trades directly through StockCharts.
- Cons: Real-time data, along with many other features, requires a subscription.
StockCharts.com gallery
Best for ease of use - Yahoo Finance
Company |
Overall |
Yahoo Finance
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Yahoo Finance offers clean HTML5 charts that are clear, easy to use, and ideal for everyday investors. Yahoo Finance is also an excellent website for stock quotes, research, and news (other than the annoying ads).
As I was testing out these sites, I was impressed by Yahoo's rich charting experience. Don’t settle for the first chart that pops up on the quote screen. Click on the “advanced chart” link to get the whole experience. Do you want a Guppy Multiple Moving Average on your charts? You got it. There’s also automated pattern recognition, a feature I love (especially when it’s free). Unfortunately, advanced charting features like key event overlays require a subscription to Yahoo Finance's Gold tier, for $49.95 per month (or $39.95/mo billed all at once annually for $479.40).
- Pros: Comprehensive choice of indicators. Great tools and clean, full-screen stock charts that are easy to read and customize.
- Cons: Ads; premium pricing is listed monthly but only billed annually; the best features are locked away behind a paywall.
Best for free analysis - Stock Rover
Company |
Overall |
Stock Rover
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While Stock Rover’s best assets are tied to its subscription accounts, the free registered version has much to recommend it, specifically in how it aligns fundamental data with a traditional price chart.
Overall, the charts are good, though limited in terms of number of indicators (15) and max historical time frame. Chart zoomers and scrollers will be happier on TradingView, StockCharts’ ACP and Charles Schwab’s thinkorswim. Still, Stock Rover packs plenty of features under the hood, especially in the paid versions. Stock Rover also offers market news and information on a wide range of stocks, bonds, ETFs, mutual funds and commodities.
- Pros: Analyst ratings, clear charts and solid presentation of fundamental data.
- Cons: Stock Rover won’t be a top choice for pure technical analysts. Some of the labeling is odd and there’s no manual annotation on charts.
Best for stock screening - Finviz
Company |
Overall |
Finviz
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Finviz isn’t known for flashy charts, but what it lacks in visual depth it makes up for with powerful screening. Most traders find Finviz through its stock screener as it's one of the most comprehensive free tools online. You can filter thousands of stocks using dozens of technical and fundamental data points, all without creating an account.
Charting, however, is where Finviz comes up short. Free users can view static charts with volume and moving averages, but even basic features like intraday timeframes and fullscreen mode are locked behind the $24.96/month Elite subscription. During testing, nearly every chart interaction triggered an upgrade prompt. And while the Elite version does enable real-time data and more flexible chart access, it still doesn’t compare to platforms like TradingView or StockCharts ACP in terms of technical tools, overlays, or customization.
That said, I appreciated how integrated Finviz's charts are within its screener and portfolio tools. With one click, you can jump from a filtered stock list to its chart, then save it to a portfolio or download the data. For investors who prioritize screening and market scanning, this tight workflow is efficient even if the charting itself feels like a secondary feature.
- Pros: Excellent stock screener, integrated charts with volume and MAs, most features available without login.
- Cons: Limited charting tools for free users, constant upgrade prompts, lacks customization even with Elite.
FAQs
Where can I chart stocks for free?
The best free stock charts are on TradingView. Other free charting websites include StockCharts.com, FINVIZ, Stock Rover and Yahoo Finance. Traders can also open an account at many of the best stock brokers for free and chart stocks, even with a zero balance.
What is the best free stock chart?
TradingView has the best free stock charts. They are crisp, easy to use, highly customizable and update with real-time quotes. For pure stock charts, Yahoo Finance’s real-time ChartIQ-powered charts are hard to beat.
Is TradingView free?
TradingView has both free and premium options. Most individual investors should be satisfied with the free tier, but active traders will likely crave a premium account. Another option is to trade with a broker that uses TradingView charts, such as TradeStation, Interactive Brokers, and Ally Invest.
Is there a free version of StockCharts.com?
StockCharts.com offers free, limited-features charting on its homepage but does not offer a free account. There is a 30-day free trial available for its premium services, which start at $19.95 per month (or $18.42/mo with an annual subscription). You will have to provide payment information to access the 30-day trial.
Best free stock charts features comparison
Website |
Base Cost |
Premium Version |
Best Feature |
Rating |
TradingView.com |
Free |
$12.95/mo+ |
Clean, comprehensive charting |
5 Stars |
StockCharts.com |
Free |
$18.42/mo+ |
Education and commentary |
4.5 Stars |
Yahoo Finance |
Free |
$39.95/mo+ |
Powerful advanced charting |
4.5 Stars |
Stock Rover |
Free |
$7.99/mo+ |
Charting fundamentals |
4 Stars |
FINVIZ.com |
Free |
$24.96/mo |
Automated analysis |
3 Stars |
Why you should trust us
Blain Reinkensmeyer, co-founder of StockBrokers.com, has been investing and trading for over 25 years. After having placed over 2,000 trades in his late teens and early 20s, he became one of the first in digital media to review online brokerages. Today, Blain is widely respected as a leading expert on finance and investing, specifically the U.S. online brokerage industry. Blain has been quoted in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and Fast Company, among others. Blain created the original scoring rubrics for StockBrokers.com and oversees all testing and rating methodologies.
How we tested
- We used our own brokerage accounts for testing.
- We collected thousands of data points for each broker.
- We tested each online broker's website, desktop platforms, and mobile app, where applicable.
- We maintained strict editorial independence; brokers cannot pay for inclusion or a higher rating.
Our research team meticulously collected data on every feature of importance to a wide range of customer profiles, including beginners, casual investors, passive investors, and active traders. We carefully track variables like margin rates, trading costs, fees, and platform features and use them to help rate brokers across a range of categories measuring ease of use, range of investments, research, education, and more.
At StockBrokers.com, our reviewers use a variety of computing devices to evaluate platforms and tools. Our reviews and data collection were conducted using the following devices: iPhone SE running iOS 17.5.1, MacBook Pro M1 with 8 GB RAM running the current MacOS, and a Dell Vostro 5402 laptop i5 with 8 GB RAM running Windows 11 Pro.
Each broker was evaluated and scored on over 200 different variables across seven key categories: Range of Investments, Platforms & Tools, Research, Mobile Trading, Education, Ease of Use, and Overall. Learn more about how we test.