Independent broker research
027Vol. IVJuly 10, 2026
Independent broker research

Broker research

FBS TradingView checklist

Many traders want to chart and execute trades through TradingView, and they search for broker integrations before choosing where to open an account. This page does not confirm that FBS integrates with TradingView. Broker platform lineups change, and integration availability can differ by entity and region. What follows is a practical checklist for establishing, from current FBS documents and official channels, whether any TradingView connection exists for your account type, how it would work, and what limitations or costs would apply.

FBS TradingView checklist cover image

Confirm whether an integration exists for your account

The only reliable sources for platform availability are the broker's own current platform pages, the account dashboard after registration, and written answers from official support. TradingView also maintains a broker connection list inside its own product, which you can check from your TradingView account. An integration mentioned in an old blog post or video may have been added, changed or withdrawn since publication, so always confirm the current state before you commit to an account.

  • Check the platforms section of the FBS website for any mention of TradingView and note the date and entity the page applies to.
  • Ask FBS support in writing whether TradingView trading is supported for your country and account type, and save the reply.
  • Confirm whether any integration allows order execution from TradingView charts or is limited to charting alongside a separate FBS platform.
  • Check which instruments and account types the connection covers, since integrations sometimes exclude certain products.

Understand how a broker-TradingView connection works

In general, when a broker supports TradingView, you link your broker account from inside TradingView and orders placed on the chart route to the broker for execution. Pricing, spreads, margin rules and execution quality come from the broker, not from TradingView. TradingView itself has free and paid subscription tiers with different limits on charts, indicators and alerts, and those subscription costs are separate from anything the broker charges. Knowing this split helps you ask the right verification questions.

  • Broker-side costs such as spreads, commissions and swaps apply regardless of which front end you use to place orders.
  • TradingView subscription tiers are billed by TradingView and are independent of broker fees.
  • Order types available through an integration can be narrower than those in the broker's native platform, so verify supported order types.
  • Confirm whether positions opened in one platform are visible and manageable in the other.

Fallback checks if no integration is available

If you cannot verify a live TradingView connection, decide whether the broker's native platforms meet your needs, or whether you would use TradingView for analysis only and execute trades separately. Manually mirroring trades between a charting tool and a broker platform introduces delay and error risk, so weigh that honestly. Also verify the broker fundamentals that matter regardless of platform: the regulating entity for your account, the fee schedule, and the client agreement terms.

  • List the platforms FBS currently documents for your region and test them on a demo account if one is offered.
  • If you would chart on TradingView and execute elsewhere, account for the delay between analysis and execution.
  • Confirm the FBS entity, regulator and fee schedule for your account before depositing.
  • Read the wider Fbs review at /reviews/fbs, or compare platform options across brokers at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=fbs.

Continue researching

Open related InvestorTrip pages before treating this topic as a final decision.

FAQ

Does FBS work with TradingView?

This page does not confirm an integration. Availability changes and can vary by entity and region. Check the current FBS platform pages, the broker list inside TradingView, and get written confirmation from FBS support before relying on it.

If a broker connects to TradingView, who sets the trading costs?

The broker. Spreads, commissions, swaps and margin rules come from the broker account you connect. TradingView charges its own separate subscription fees for chart features, which apply regardless of which broker you use.

Can I use TradingView without a broker integration?

Yes, you can use TradingView for charting and analysis on its own and place trades separately in a broker platform. This adds manual steps and potential delay between your analysis and execution, so factor that into your process.