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

Broker research

Robinhood TradingView checklist

Many traders chart on TradingView and want to know whether they can connect it to their broker or, at minimum, use both tools side by side. This page does not confirm that a TradingView integration exists for Robinhood. Broker-platform connections are added and removed over time, so any claim you read elsewhere may be out of date. Instead, this checklist walks through where to verify the current situation and how to work sensibly if a direct connection is not available.

Robinhood TradingView checklist cover image

Verify integration claims at the source

The dependable way to check whether two platforms connect is to look at both companies' own published lists and settings pages, not forum posts or older articles. On the charting side, supported broker connections are typically listed inside the platform's trading panel. On the broker side, official help documentation should state which third-party tools, if any, can link to an account. If you cannot find the connection documented in either place, assume it is not currently supported and confirm with the broker's support channel before relying on it.

  • Check TradingView's in-platform broker connection list rather than third-party summaries.
  • Search Robinhood's official help documentation for statements about third-party platform access.
  • Contact broker support and keep a record of the answer and the date you received it.
  • Treat undated or older articles about integrations as unverified until you confirm them yourself.

How to work if there is no direct connection

If a direct link between a charting platform and your broker is not available, many traders run the two tools in parallel: charting and analysis in one window, order entry in the broker's own app or website in another. This workflow adds a manual step and a short delay between deciding on a trade and placing it, which matters more for fast intraday strategies than for longer-term investing. Consider whether your approach genuinely needs one-click execution from the chart, or whether separate tools are workable.

  • Decide whether your strategy requires order entry from the chart or can tolerate manual order placement.
  • Compare the broker's built-in charting against your actual needs before paying for external tools.
  • Account for the time gap between analysis in one platform and execution in another.

Questions to answer before committing to a setup

Before building your workflow around a specific broker and charting combination, write down what you need: markets covered, data quality, alert handling and order types. Then verify each item against current documentation. Our full Robinhood review at /reviews/robinhood covers the broker's wider platform, and the comparison tool at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=robinhood can help you weigh Robinhood against other reviewed brokers if platform connectivity is a priority for you. The reviews hub at /reviews lists further broker research pages.

  • List your must-have features and check each one against current official documentation.
  • Confirm whether market data shown in your charting tool matches what your broker uses for execution.
  • Re-verify integrations periodically, since supported connections change without much notice.

Continue researching

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

FAQ

Does Robinhood connect to TradingView?

This page does not confirm any integration. Broker connections change over time, so check TradingView's in-platform broker list and Robinhood's official help documentation, and confirm with broker support if the answer is unclear. Treat older third-party articles as unverified.

Can I still use TradingView for analysis if there is no integration?

Yes. Many traders chart in one platform and place orders in their broker's app separately. This adds a manual step, so consider whether your strategy needs execution directly from the chart or can work with two tools side by side.

Why do integration claims online often conflict?

Platform partnerships are added and removed, and articles are rarely updated when that happens. A claim that was accurate when written can be wrong today. Verifying at the source, inside both platforms and in official documentation, resolves most conflicting information.