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Trade Analytics for Traders: 9 Best Tools (2026)

By Daniel Kapadia, founder of Mettle · Published June 22, 2026

Disclosure: Mettle is our product, and it's on this list — but as the review- and behavior-led option, not the deep-quant dashboard, and we rank it accordingly rather than first. Dedicated analytics platforms here go materially deeper on objective, auto-computed statistics than Mettle does. Every competitor claim links to its own materials, with unverified items flagged. Specs and prices are from each vendor's published materials as of June 2026 and change often.

Trade performance analytics turn your raw fills into the numbers that tell you whether you have an edge: win rate, profit factor, expectancy, R-multiples, equity curves, drawdown, and slicing by time, symbol, setup, and tag. The strongest tools auto-import from your broker and compute these objectively from execution data, so the analysis doesn't depend on what you remember. They differ mainly on import breadth, depth of slicing, asset coverage, and how much they lean into psychology versus pure quant.

How we evaluated these trade analytics tools

We weighted objective, auto-computed depth: how many metrics, how granular the slicing, how broad the broker auto-import, and how much asset coverage. We treated psychology and review features as a plus but not the main axis — that's a separate category — and we flagged where a tool is narrow on asset class or relies on manual entry.

Trade analytics comparison

Specs and prices are from each vendor's own materials, June 2026 — verify before you buy.

Tool Analytics depth Notable Best for Starting price
TradesViz Deepest: 600+ stats, ~500 charts, plain-English AI Q&A Free tier, all-asset on Pro Data-hungry traders who want the most slicing per dollar Free tier; low-cost Pro
TraderSync 40+ customizable metrics, MFE/MAE, widest auto-import 900+ brokers/exchanges Multi-broker/multi-asset traders See vendor
TradeZella Clean suite around a single "Zella Score" + backtesting Calendar P&L, R-multiple views All-in-one analytics + journaling + backtesting See vendor
Tradervue 100+ advanced reports, MFE/MAE, mentor sharing Industry-standard reporting Equity/options traders + coach-shared journals See vendor
Trademetria Multi-asset consolidation, strong options/spread analytics Real-time Greeks, spread merge Options/multi-market traders Free tier
Chartlog Clean setup-centric analytics for US equities/options TradingView chart per trade US stock/options day traders who want simplicity See vendor
Edgewonk R-multiple edge math + discipline analytics Tiltmeter alongside stats Discretionary traders wanting quant + psychology See vendor
StonkJournal Basic stats, free, manual entry Free forever, multi-filter stacking Budget traders who want a free manual log Free
Mettle Review/behavior-led, partly self-reported Cass weekly review, behavioral tags Traders who want reflection around the numbers Free to start, no card

TradesViz

TradesViz is the deepest pure-quant option: it markets 600+ stats and metrics and hundreds of charts including MFE/MAE, R/R, running P&L, and options Greeks, plus an AI Q&A that lets you ask in plain English, like "show me my best trades on Mondays" [1]. There's a free Basic tier (stocks only) and a low-cost Pro adding all assets and the AI features [2]. Best value for data-hungry traders.

Pros: unmatched metric breadth; plain-English AI querying; strong free tier.

Cons: the depth can overwhelm; some advanced features are Pro-only.

TraderSync

TraderSync pairs the broadest auto-import net here — 900+ brokers and exchanges — with 40+ customizable metrics and MFE/MAE, plus AI pattern detection [3]. If you trade across many brokers or assets and want the widest automatic coverage with deep customization, it leads on import breadth [4].

Pros: widest broker auto-import; deep metric customization; AI patterns.

Cons: paid; breadth has a setup cost.

TradeZella

TradeZella's dashboard surfaces win rate, profit factor, expectancy, max drawdown, equity curve, and a calendar P&L view across 7+ views including R-multiple, ticks, and pips, all around a single Zella Score, with journaling and backtesting alongside [5][6]. The cleanest opinionated all-in-one.

Pros: polished dashboard; all-in-one with backtesting; clear single score.

Cons: opinionated structure; no free trial.

Tradervue

Tradervue offers 100+ advanced reports, imports from 80+ brokers, TradingView charts with entries and exits, and MFE/MAE, slicing P&L by tag, time of day, instrument, and setup, plus its mentor-sharing layer [7]. Long the industry standard for reporting depth.

Pros: exhaustive reports; mentor sharing; mature and reliable.

Cons: deeper reports and MFE/MAE are on Gold; interface is utilitarian.

Trademetria

Trademetria analyzes performance by execution, strategy, instrument, and asset class across stocks, futures, options, forex, crypto, and CFDs, with standout options support — spread merging and real-time Greeks — at a mid price with a free tier [8]. Best for options and multi-market traders consolidating everything in one place.

Pros: broad asset coverage; strong options/spread analytics; free tier.

Cons: general analytics are good, not the deepest; no replay.

Chartlog

Chartlog is clean, simple analytics for active US equity and options traders, organized around a structured strategy/setup system: it integrates with about ten US brokers, plots every trade on a full TradingView chart, and tracks P/L, commissions, win rate, and expectancy, with breakdowns by day of week and strategy tag [9]. Note the US equities/options focus — futures, forex, and crypto aren't listed.

Pros: clean, setup-centric view; chart per trade; no bloat.

Cons: US stocks/options only; narrower than the all-asset tools.

Edgewonk

Edgewonk measures every trade in R-multiples, calculates your mathematical edge, scores execution quality separately from outcome, and runs its Tiltmeter correlating emotional state and rule-breaks to P&L, with 50+ pre-built stats plus MAE/MFE [10]. It's the closest competitor in spirit to a behavior-led tool while still producing hard quant stats — a useful hybrid.

Pros: rigorous R-multiple edge math; psychology + quant together; flat annual pricing.

Cons: dated interface; manual entry for some analytics.

StonkJournal

StonkJournal is completely free with no card and no trade limits: manual entry with tags, a confidence meter, image attachments, notes, a calendar, and multi-filter stacking across symbol, tag, P&L range, date, and market type [11]. There's no broker auto-import — everything is entered by hand — and analytics are basic, but for a free manual log it's capable.

Pros: free forever; flexible filtering; no friction to start.

Cons: manual entry only; basic stats; no automation.

Mettle

Mettle (that's us) belongs here as the review- and behavior-led option, not a deep-quant dashboard — and we'd rather say that than oversell. Mettle's core is post-trade review with self-reported execution scoring and behavioral tagging, with Cass reviewing logged trades and giving weekly feedback. The dedicated analytics platforms above go materially deeper on objective, auto-computed statistics: hundreds of metrics, broad auto-import, MFE/MAE, granular slicing. Mettle trades that raw quant depth for structured reflection and the behavioral context behind the numbers.

The fair comparison: if you want the most exhaustive P&L and stat slicing, pick a pure-analytics tool. If you want a review loop that builds the discipline and self-awareness behind the numbers, that's Mettle's lane — and it's the only free-to-start, no-card option here. The Journal (Apprentice tier) is live now; Trader and Master tiers are coming soon.

Pros: structured review loop; behavioral context; free to start, no card.

Cons: lighter on deep objective analytics; partly self-reported.

How to choose

For the most metrics per dollar, TradesViz. For the widest broker auto-import, TraderSync. For a clean all-in-one with backtesting, TradeZella. For exhaustive reports or coach sharing, Tradervue. For options and multi-asset, Trademetria. For a simple US-equities view, Chartlog. For edge math plus psychology, Edgewonk. For a free manual log, StonkJournal. And if the numbers aren't your problem so much as reflecting on them honestly each week, that's where Mettle fits. Match the tool to whether your gap is data depth or review discipline — they're different problems.

Sources

  1. TradesViz. https://www.tradesviz.com/
  2. TradesViz — pricing. https://www.tradesviz.com/pricing/
  3. TraderSync — features. https://tradersync.com/features/
  4. TraderSync — pricing. https://tradersync.com/pricing/
  5. TradeZella — features. https://www.tradezella.com/features
  6. TradeZella — pricing. https://www.tradezella.com/pricing
  7. Tradervue. https://www.tradervue.com/
  8. Trademetria — features. https://trademetria.com/trading-journal-features
  9. Chartlog — insights. https://www.chartlog.com/product/insights/
  10. Edgewonk — features. https://edgewonk.com/features
  11. StonkJournal. https://stonkjournal.com/

Try the feedback loop yourself

Log a session, score your execution, and let Cass review it against your own history. Free to start, no card.

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