What is TradeTrack
A professional trading journal in your browser—trades, analytics, and habits in one place.
Alex Bielow
Last Update vor einem Monat
TradeTrack is a web-based trading journal. It helps you record trades, view statistics, write notes, and track discipline—without endless spreadsheets and manual copy-paste from your terminal.
Who it is for
Traders on forex, crypto, and prop firms who want a structured way to improve—from demo beginners to traders juggling multiple challenges and funded accounts.
How it differs from Excel or Google Sheets
In spreadsheets you enter everything yourself and build charts. In TradeTrack, trades enter the journal through terminal connections (TradeLocker, cTrader), file import (MetaTrader 5), or manual entry. You add context: session, setup, mistakes, notes. Statistics (win rate, PnL, sessions, drawdown per account settings) are built from that data.
What the product does for you
Imports or syncs trades (dates, symbols, size, profit). Calculates percentages vs account capital when you set nominal size. Organizes activity by trading accounts (separate challenge, demo, live). Shows statistics and summaries on the dashboard.
What you still do
A journal pays off when you add what the terminal does not: why you traded, what went wrong, screenshots, plan, discipline. TradeTrack offers trade notes, trading plan entries, mistake tracking, discipline and demon trackers, and daily notes where available.
Main areas (quick map)
Dashboard — overview. Trades — list and trade details. Trading accounts — accounts and terminal setup. Statistics — deeper analysis. Trading plan — planning entries. Discipline tracker — daily rules and demons. Backtests — separate workflow for strategy testing; keep it separate from live trades.
Getting started
Sign up, create your first trading account, add trades (integration, import, or manual), open a few trades and add notes. See “First steps after signup” and “Trading accounts in TradeTrack” for details.
Pricing
During beta, core features are free; changes will be announced in advance.
Who it is for
Traders on forex, crypto, and prop firms who want a structured way to improve—from demo beginners to traders juggling multiple challenges and funded accounts.
How it differs from Excel or Google Sheets
In spreadsheets you enter everything yourself and build charts. In TradeTrack, trades enter the journal through terminal connections (TradeLocker, cTrader), file import (MetaTrader 5), or manual entry. You add context: session, setup, mistakes, notes. Statistics (win rate, PnL, sessions, drawdown per account settings) are built from that data.
What the product does for you
Imports or syncs trades (dates, symbols, size, profit). Calculates percentages vs account capital when you set nominal size. Organizes activity by trading accounts (separate challenge, demo, live). Shows statistics and summaries on the dashboard.
What you still do
A journal pays off when you add what the terminal does not: why you traded, what went wrong, screenshots, plan, discipline. TradeTrack offers trade notes, trading plan entries, mistake tracking, discipline and demon trackers, and daily notes where available.
Main areas (quick map)
Dashboard — overview. Trades — list and trade details. Trading accounts — accounts and terminal setup. Statistics — deeper analysis. Trading plan — planning entries. Discipline tracker — daily rules and demons. Backtests — separate workflow for strategy testing; keep it separate from live trades.
Getting started
Sign up, create your first trading account, add trades (integration, import, or manual), open a few trades and add notes. See “First steps after signup” and “Trading accounts in TradeTrack” for details.
Pricing
During beta, core features are free; changes will be announced in advance.
