TradingView India review
The global standard for charting and technical analysis, with full NSE / BSE coverage and broker integration for Indian users.
What is TradingView India?
TradingView is the world's most-used charting platform and its India site (in.tradingview.com) gives Indian traders the same charting engine and indicator library applied to NSE, BSE and MCX symbols. It is browser- and app-first, with Pine Script for custom indicators, social streams and broker integration (Zerodha, Fyers and others) for placing trades directly from the chart.
Key features
- Full NSE, BSE and MCX coverage with real-time or delayed data (depending on plan).
- Industry-standard charting: 15+ chart types, 100+ built-in indicators, drawing tools and multi-timeframe analysis.
- Pine Script — write custom indicators and strategies in TradingView's domain-specific language.
- Built-in alerts on price, indicator and drawing-tool events.
- Broker integration for Zerodha, Fyers and a few others — place trades directly from the chart.
- Public chart-sharing and ideas feed with a large Indian community.
Pricing
Pros and cons
Who should use TradingView India?
Anyone who runs technical analysis on Indian equities, futures, commodities or currencies — from intraday scalpers to swing traders. The charting depth alone is hard to beat.
Alternatives
Brokers that pair well with TradingView India
TradingView India works on top of an existing broker account. Compare charges and account features on the broker pages below.
Frequently asked
What people ask about TradingView India.
There is a free tier — three indicators per chart, one alert, and delayed NSE / BSE data. Real-time exchange data, more indicators, more alerts and saved layouts require a paid plan (Essential, Plus, Premium or Expert).
Yes, through the broker-integration layer. TradingView supports order placement from the chart for a few Indian brokers (Zerodha and Fyers are the main ones at the time of writing). Your account, demat and margin stay with the broker; TradingView just sends orders via API.
Pine Script is TradingView's own scripting language for writing custom indicators and strategies. It is intentionally lightweight and well-documented, which is why so many Indian traders' custom indicators are on TradingView rather than elsewhere.
TradingView wins on charting depth, indicators, scripting and broker integration. Chartink wins on Indian-specific scans — its scan library and saved-scan dashboard are designed for NSE pattern hunting in a way TradingView is not. Many Indian traders use Chartink for scanning and TradingView for analysis.
No. TradingView is a charting and analysis layer, not a broker. Even with the trade-from-chart integration, your demat, funds and statements stay with your broker (e.g. Zerodha) — TradingView is just sending orders through the broker's API.