Chartlog Review

Chartlog is a journaling and analytics platform for active equity traders, built in 2019 by Adrian Campos and Igor Milivojevic, two traders from the Bear Bull Traders community who started independently building the same thing and eventually merged their efforts. The platform integrates with 10 US stock and options brokers, displays every trade on a full TradingView chart with entries and exits marked, and organizes performance analytics around a structured strategy system. It covers stocks and options. Futures, forex, and crypto are not mentioned anywhere on the platform’s website.

Three tiers. Clean design. Focused scope. No AI, no replay, no backtesting. For the right trader, it is one of the most pleasant journaling experiences in the category. For the wrong one, it is a well-designed tool that simply does not cover the asset classes or analytics depth they need.


Asset Classes and Import

Chartlog is built for US equity traders. Every confirmed broker integration (DAS Trader, E*TRADE, Interactive Brokers, Merrill Edge, Tastytrade, TD Ameritrade, Thinkorswim, TradeStation, TradeZero, and Webull) is a US stock or options platform. The 15+ years of historical data comes from all 16 US exchanges. There is no mention of futures, forex, or crypto support anywhere on the platform’s website or in any confirmed product documentation.

Import is automatic and real-time once a broker is connected. The integration list is narrow compared to most alternatives in this category: 10 named brokers versus Trademetria’s 140+ and TraderSync’s 700+. For a trader on one of those 10 platforms, setup takes minutes and trades appear in the journal immediately. For anyone outside that list, the only option is manual entry.

Manual entry is supported, but the platform’s core value proposition depends on the automated import. A trader manually logging every execution on a busy day trading session is not using Chartlog at its best.


TradingView Charts Per Trade

This is what Chartlog does better than anyone else in the category at its price point. Every imported trade gets a full TradingView chart with the exact entry and exit points marked. More than 100 indicators are available. The chart type, timeframe, and indicator settings are all configurable per trade or globally.

Reviewing a losing trade on Chartlog means opening the entry, seeing the price action plotted cleanly with entries and exits marked on a professional-grade chart, and understanding at a glance where the setup failed. Platforms that generate their own charts or pull simplified price data are no match for this experience. TradingView’s chart quality is the industry standard, and it shows in every trade review.

Traders can share individual journal entries, with the TradingView chart, directly to Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Reddit, and WhatsApp from within the platform. For traders who publicly document their performance or participate in trading communities, this is a meaningful workflow advantage.

For context on how chart-based review fits into an effective journaling process, the trading journal example guide on this site walks through what that retrospective analysis actually looks like.


Journal Features

Each trade entry supports custom tags, screenshots, stop loss and profit target fields, fundamentals and technicals for the stock, and emotional state tracking. Calendar and table views both display the full trade history. The calendar view shows daily P&L at a glance, with one click opening the full session detail.

The journal design is worth noting specifically. Every element feels intentional. The interface has been consistently described across multiple independent reviews as the cleanest in the category. That is not accidental. Both founders were active traders before they were developers, and the UI reflects genuine firsthand knowledge of what a trader actually needs during a post-session review.

The emotional state tracking captures how a trader felt before and during a trade, which links to the strategy analysis. A trader who consistently makes mistakes when anxious will see that pattern reflected in the data if they use it consistently.


Strategy System

The strategy feature is Chartlog’s most differentiated analytical tool. A strategy is defined with specific market conditions (e.g., price above VWAP), entry triggers (e.g., price dropping below EMA), and exit rules (stop loss or profit target). Once defined, every trade is tagged to a strategy, and Chartlog tracks performance metrics by strategy over time.

The sample set testing feature allows a strategy to be tested against historical data before applying it to live trades. This is closer to a simplified backtest against personal trading history than a full backtesting engine. It evaluates how the strategy’s defined conditions mapped against past trade outcomes, not a forward simulation on arbitrary historical data. The distinction matters: it is a filter on historical trades, not a simulator. But for a trader who wants to know whether their VWAP-breakout setup has actually been profitable over the past three months, it answers that question directly.

Strategy comparison lets multiple strategies be placed side by side, with performance metrics broken down for each. The Pro tier adds breakdowns by day of week and strategy tag combinations, which reveals patterns that average data obscures. A strategy might perform well on Tuesdays but poorly on Fridays, which would never surface in a monthly summary.

This is where Standard and Pro earn their upgrade cost. Lite gives the journal and charts. Standard adds the strategy system. Pro adds the depth of analysis that makes the strategy system genuinely actionable.


Pricing

PlanMonthlyAnnual (per month)Annual total
Lite$14.99~$13.49~$161.88
Standard$29.99~$25.49~$305.88
Pro$39.99$19.99$239.88

All plans include a 7-day free trial. Annual billing discounts are 10% on Lite, 15% on Standard, and 20% on Pro. The Pro annual total of $239.88/year is confirmed directly from Chartlog’s terms page. Monthly prices for Lite and Standard are sourced from third-party reviews and should be verified at chartlog.com before subscribing.

Lite at $14.99/month is the cheapest entry point for a journal with real broker autosync and TradingView charts in this category. It is worth the price for any active stock trader who wants clean chart-based review without strategy analytics. Most traders will want Standard or Pro once they start using the strategy tagging system, because Lite does not include it.

Pro’s monthly price at $39.99 is harder to justify against competitors. At that monthly rate, TraderSync Pro offers AI coaching, 700+ broker integrations, trade replay, and MAE/MFE. But on annual billing, Pro at $239.88/year competes very differently. It is cheaper than Edgewonk ($197 for 12 months, though Edgewonk’s feature set is deeper in behavioral analysis) and comparable to Trademetria Basic annual ($169/year). For a US equity trader who prioritizes interface quality and strategy clarity over AI or replay, the annual Pro tier is defensible.


Limitations

The broker list is genuinely limited. Ten integrations is narrow in a category where competitors have built pipelines to 140, 500, or 700+ platforms. Traders using any broker outside DAS Trader, E*TRADE, Interactive Brokers, Merrill Edge, Tastytrade, TD Ameritrade, Thinkorswim, TradeStation, TradeZero, or Webull have no automated import path.

No futures, forex, or crypto support. Chartlog is a US equity and options platform. Multi-market traders need to look elsewhere.

No trade replay, no backtesting beyond the strategy sample-set filter, no AI features. The analytics are well-structured but standard-depth. MFE/MAE is not available. Exit efficiency analysis is not available. For traders who need those specific metrics, Chartlog does not deliver them.

No mobile app. Web browser only.

Customer support is live chat during business hours only. International traders outside US time zones will encounter gaps. The help documentation within the platform is described as solid, but live support is not 24/7.

The strategy sample-set testing is genuinely useful but limited in scope compared to the backtesting engines in TradeZella or TradesViz. It is a filter on past trades against defined criteria, not a forward simulation on historical price data with new position sizes. Traders expecting the latter and getting the former will be disappointed.


Bottom Line

Pros:

  • TradingView-powered charts per trade; the best visual trade review experience in the category at this price
  • Strategy system with defined conditions, tagging, and side-by-side comparison
  • Sample-set strategy testing against historical trade data
  • Cleanest interface in the category; consistent assessment across multiple independent reviews
  • Real-time autosync from 10 major US stock and options platforms
  • 15+ years of historical market data from all 16 US exchanges
  • Trade sharing to social media directly from the journal
  • 7-day free trial on all plans
  • Pro annual pricing at $239.88/year is competitive for what it delivers

Cons:

  • Only 10 broker integrations; one of the narrowest lists in the category
  • US equities and options only; no futures, forex, or crypto
  • No trade replay or simulation
  • No AI features
  • No MFE/MAE or advanced exit analysis
  • No mobile app
  • Live chat support limited to business hours
  • Strategy sample-set testing is filtered trade history, not a true backtesting engine

Chartlog is the right tool for an active US equity day trader or swing trader who values clean visual trade review above all else, trades on one of the 10 supported platforms, and wants structured strategy analytics without the complexity of a platform like TradesViz. The TradingView integration per trade is genuinely the best in this price range. The strategy system is structured enough to be useful without being overwhelming.

Traders who need futures, forex, crypto, or a wider broker list will exhaust Chartlog’s scope immediately. Traders who want AI coaching, trade replay, or deep behavioral analysis should look at Edgewonk, TraderSync, or TradesViz. But within its defined lane, visual equity journaling with strategy clarity, Chartlog earns its place.

The best trading journals roundup places Chartlog in context against the full field, which is worth checking for traders still deciding between options in different niches.


FAQ

What brokers does Chartlog support?

Chartlog integrates with 10 platforms for automatic real-time trade import: DAS Trader, E*TRADE, Interactive Brokers, Merrill Edge, Tastytrade, TD Ameritrade, Thinkorswim, TradeStation, TradeZero, and Webull. Manual entry is available for brokers outside this list.

Does Chartlog support futures, forex, or crypto?

No. Based on all available platform documentation, Chartlog covers US stocks and options. Futures, forex, and crypto are not mentioned anywhere in Chartlog’s product pages or confirmed feature lists.

What is the difference between the three plans?

Lite ($14.99/month) provides the trade journal, TradingView charts, and unlimited imports with no strategy analytics. Standard ($29.99/month) adds strategy tracking and basic insight reports. Pro ($39.99/month, or $19.99/month billed annually at $239.88/year) adds advanced insight reports, custom report building, pre/post-market data, and performance breakdowns by day of week and strategy tag combinations.

Does Chartlog have a free trial?

Yes. A 7-day free trial is available on all three plans.

What is the strategy sample-set testing feature?

It allows a trader to test how a defined strategy’s conditions would have mapped against their historical imported trades before applying it live. It filters past trade history against the strategy’s criteria and returns performance metrics. It is not a forward simulation on historical market data; it evaluates existing trade records against defined rules.

Does Chartlog have trade replay or backtesting?

No trade replay. The strategy sample-set testing is the closest feature to backtesting, but it analyzes historical trade data against defined conditions rather than simulating new trades on historical price data.

Is there a mobile app?

No. Chartlog is web-based and accessible through a browser. There is no native iOS or Android application.

Who is Chartlog best suited for?

Active US equity day traders and swing traders on one of the 10 supported broker platforms who prioritize clean visual trade review using TradingView charts, and want structured strategy tracking without high complexity. It is not suitable for futures, forex, or crypto traders, or for anyone who needs trade replay, AI coaching, or broader broker coverage.