What is GoCharting?

GoCharting homepage

GoCharting is a web-first trading terminal operated by Procharting Private Limited, an Indian company incorporated in 2021, though the domain itself dates to 2016. It runs in the browser, with companion iOS and Android apps, and bundles charting, a real-time scanner, order-flow analytics, options tooling, and a proprietary scripting language into one self-contained product. The company markets itself as the World's first Multi-Asset Orderflow Platform and claims 3M+ traders, both of which are unaudited marketing superlatives we report as the company's claims rather than established facts.

The core is the chart: more than 15 chart types including footprint/cluster, Renko, Kagi, Range, Point & Figure, and tick charts, layered with a claimed 200-plus technical indicators. On top sit order-flow tools that are the platform's real identity: footprint and imbalance charts, delta bars, cumulative volume delta, Market and Volume Profile, and a depth-of-market ladder. The screener, called the Power Trades Scanner, is a real-time large-block-trade detector. The scripting layer, Lipi, lets users build custom indicators and alerts. Crucially, GoCharting ships no proprietary signal system, no arrows, and no win-rate claim. It is a discretionary toolkit, not a signal service.

Our verdict

GoCharting is a feature-rich, fairly priced, and unusually honest charting and order-flow terminal whose forex story is the weakest part of an otherwise strong product. Its transparency is a real differentiator: it makes no performance claims, ships no black-box signals, and openly documents that most indicators repaint. Against that sit consistent complaints about browser performance, data lag, and slow support, a strict no-refund policy, and a 2018 privacy policy that says nothing about how it handles the broker API credentials it asks users to connect. For a futures or crypto order-flow trader the value is obvious. For a pure forex trader, the data-vendor silence and absence of forex order flow make it a much harder recommendation. We score it 7.0 out of 10.

We assess GoCharting from its public pages, pricing and terms, scripting documentation, app-store and aggregator ratings, and aggregated user reviews. We have not created a paid account or run trades.

Key features & specs

The pattern to notice is breadth: GoCharting tries to be one terminal for futures, crypto, Indian equities, US stocks, and forex, with order flow as its signature. The chart engine spans 15-plus types including footprint/cluster, Renko, Kagi, Range, Point & Figure, and tick charts, with a claimed 200-plus technical indicators covering RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands, VWAP, and orderflow metrics, plus drawing tools (Fibonacci, Gann, harmonic patterns, channels, magnet mode, and multi-chart sync). The order-flow suite (footprint and imbalance charts, delta bars, CVD, Market and Volume Profile, and DOM) is the platform's signature and sits behind Premium. The Power Trades Scanner is a real-time large-block detector with a configurable volume threshold and time interval, and watchlist scanning sorts by percent change, volume, CVD, open interest, or custom indicators. The Options Desk adds an options chain, strategy builder, Greeks, implied volatility, PCR, and OI buildup. Lipi scripting and free Bar Replay round out the toolkit, with alerts delivered by push, email, or webhook. There is no proprietary buy/sell-arrow system and no performance claim anywhere.

SpecificationsAll values cited from public sources
AttributeValueSource
Company & track recordOperated by Procharting Private Limited, an Indian company (CIN U72900AS2021PTC020960) incorporated 2021-02-03 in Assam, with an operational office in Chennai; the gocharting.com domain itself dates to 2016. A US “GoCharting Inc” Delaware address is a registered-agent/mail-forwarding address, not an operating HQ, and the entity also appears as “GoCharting LLC” in some directories. Named principals include Sushanta Deb (CEO/co-founder) and Ramaswamy Ramakrishnan. The company is bootstrapped and unfunded with a small team (around seven) and an estimated revenue near USD 1M, which we treat as an estimate. Its “3M+ traders” and “World's first Multi-Asset Orderflow Platform” lines are unaudited marketing claims.GoCharting
Software statusA charting and screening terminal, not a broker, adviser, or funded-trader program. It is unregulated software, which is normal and expected for this category; it custodies no funds and executes no orders as a fiduciary. It does connect to live brokers using user-supplied API credentials. No regulator or consumer warning naming GoCharting was found.GoCharting
Pricing & plansSubscription-only, with no one-time or lifetime option. Crypto/Forex Premium is $20/month, with an annual option the site says “saves 16%” (deriving to roughly a $16.80/month equivalent; no annual dollar total is displayed). US Stocks Premium is $35/month (Level 1 NBBO; Level 2/3 DOM at $49) and CME Futures is $35/month (around $40 with the NYMEX/COMEX/CBOT bundle). India plans run on rupee pricing (Lite ₹599, Premium ₹1,499). USDC is accepted.GoCharting Pricing
Free tier & trialThe free tier is $0/month, forever, with no credit card: real-time charts, Market and Volume Profile, an options chain (32 strikes) with strategy builder, multi-broker integration, one-click trading, and free Bar Replay. Limits are 2 charts per tab, 4 concurrent charts, 5 watchlists, 1 device, and 30 workspaces, with footprint and order-flow tools locked to Premium. A 7-day self-serve trial is available on the pricing page (with an option to skip the trial and pay now); whether a card is required for the trial is not disclosed.GoCharting Pricing
Platform & compatibilityBrowser-based web app (primary), with shipped iOS (App Store id1666068250) and Android apps (1M+ installs). Premium allows up to three devices. There is no Pine Script support, no MT4/MT5 indicator format, and no external embed or charting API; it is a self-contained terminal. It connects to brokers for execution (including XChief MT4/5 and Pepperstone UK on the FX side, Bybit for crypto, plus Indian and US futures brokers), but charting and analysis happen inside GoCharting.GoCharting
What it outputsA charting and scanning terminal: 15+ chart types (candlestick, Heikin-Ashi, Renko, Kagi, Range, Line Break, Footprint/Cluster, Point & Figure, Tick, Volume), a claimed 200+ technical indicators, and order-flow tools (footprint/imbalance charts, delta bars, CVD, Market/Volume Profile, DOM) on Premium. The screener is the Power Trades Scanner, a real-time large-block-trade detector with configurable volume threshold and time interval, described as “a realtime scanner and not a historical scanner.” Watchlist scanning sorts by %change, volume, CVD, open interest, or custom indicators. There is no proprietary buy/sell-arrow system. Lipi (LipiScript) is a proprietary scripting language with a community script library; alerts deliver via push, email, or webhook POST.GoCharting Docs
Markets & dataForex (50+ major/minor/exotic pairs) is listed, but the FX data vendor is undisclosed and forex order flow/footprint is not advertised. The order-flow identity is built around CME futures (100+ contracts; CME/CBOT/NYMEX/COMEX) and crypto (1000+ instruments via Binance/Bybit/Coinbase). India NSE/BSE/MCX is covered, and US equities NYSE/NASDAQ real-time is listed “Coming Soon” (EOD free). GoCharting states it is a licensed CME data provider, which we report as a vendor claim rather than an independently confirmed fact.GoCharting
Repainting & transparencyGoCharting ships no proprietary signals and makes no win-rate, accuracy, or ROI claim anywhere, which is a positive integrity signal. Its own docs are candid on repainting, stating that “it's estimated that over 95% of existing indicators exhibit some form of repainting behavior,” that “you cannot have both real-time accuracy in signals and the elimination of repainting at the same time,” and that “Not all repainting behavior is inherently problematic or misleading.” It does not claim any tool is non-repainting, and the methodology is transparent rather than a black box.GoCharting Docs

Pricing & value

GoCharting's pricing is subscription-only. There is no lifetime deal and no one-time purchase, which is worth stating plainly because lifetime offers are a common red flag in this category and GoCharting avoids them. The free tier is the standout: at zero cost, with no credit card and no expiry, it includes real-time charts, Market and Volume Profile, the options chain with 32 strikes and a strategy builder, multi-broker integration, one-click trading, and free Bar Replay. The limits are real (2 charts per tab, 4 concurrent charts, 1 device, 5 watchlists), and footprint and order-flow tools are locked behind Premium, but this is a more generous free tier than most rivals offer.

The relevant paid plan for forex and crypto traders is Crypto/Forex Premium at $20/month, with an annual option the site says saves 16% (which derives to roughly a $16.80/month equivalent; we label that as derived because no annual dollar total is displayed). That tier unlocks footprint and imbalance charts, delta bars, tick-based profiles, CVD, COT, the Power Trades Scanner, Lipi scripting, custom alerts and webhooks, and raises the device and watchlist ceilings. US Stocks Premium is $35/month (Level 1 NBBO; Level 2/3 DOM at $49), CME Futures is $35/month with a roughly $40 exchange bundle and a 7-day trial, and India plans run on rupee pricing. A recurring caveat from user reports is that real-time exchange data fees can stack on top of the plan price, so the headline number is not always the full cost. Against free built-in indicators and a free TradingView account, $20/month for genuine order-flow tooling is competitive; the value case weakens specifically for forex, where the data source is undisclosed and the order-flow tools that justify the price are not advertised for FX at all.

Trading CostFree + $20/mo Premium · subscription · 7-day trial · no refunds
Starting price:Free + $20/mo Premium
Subscription only; no lifetime/one-time; 7-day trial; no refunds
Based on the Crypto/Forex Premium, billed monthly or annually at GoCharting pricing ↗, accessed June 2026. Lowest paid plan; free tier and 7-day trial noted; exchange data fees may add to the plan price..
Account TypesPricing tiers and what each plan includes
PlanPriceBillingWhat's includedBest for
Free$0/moFree (forever)Real-time charts, Market/Volume Profile, options chain, Bar Replay; 1 device, footprint lockedTrying the terminal
Crypto/Forex Premium$20/moMonthly/AnnualFootprint, CVD, Power Trades Scanner, Lipi scripting, webhooks; 3 devicesCrypto/FX order-flow traders
US Stocks Premium$35/moMonthlyLevel 1 NBBO real-time equities (L2/3 DOM $49)US stock chartists
CME Futures$35/moMonthly (7-day trial)CME futures real-time + order flow (~$40 with exchange bundle)Futures order-flow traders
India Premium₹1,499/moMonthlyFull India F&O set incl. Scalpro options moduleActive Indian F&O traders

Transparency & trust

This is where GoCharting earns most of its credibility. The platform ships no signals, so there is no win-rate or accuracy claim to scrutinise, because the company makes none. That absence is a positive transparency signal in a category built on unbacked accuracy hype. On repainting, GoCharting's own documentation is refreshingly candid. It states that it is estimated that over 95% of existing indicators exhibit some form of repainting behavior, that you cannot have both real-time accuracy in signals and the elimination of repainting at the same time, and that not all repainting behavior is inherently problematic or misleading. We will not call any GoCharting tool non-repainting, because the vendor itself does not, and that honesty is to its credit rather than a flaw to hide. The methodology is transparent: these are standard, documented charting and order-flow calculations, not a black box.

GoCharting is unregulated software, which is normal and expected for this category. A charting terminal is not a broker and is not financially regulated, and that is not a mark against it. It does, however, connect to live brokers using user-supplied API credentials, which raises the bar on data and security disclosure. Here GoCharting falls short: its privacy policy was last updated in 2018 and is silent on encryption, data retention, server storage, and how it handles those broker credentials, despite advertising more than 20 live integrations. The platform's own broker-connection docs sensibly advise users not to share API keys, to rotate them, and to use minimal scope without withdrawal rights, but the company-level disclosure gap remains material. On data, the picture is mixed: GoCharting states it is a licensed CME data provider, which we report as a vendor claim, and for forex the FX data vendor is undisclosed while forex order flow and footprint charts are not advertised at all.

Regulation & Risk: Terms QuoteVerbatim from the client agreement

No Refunds. Payments are non-refundable and there are no refunds or credits for partially used periods.

GoCharting Terms of Service, Terms of Service, Cancellation and Termination, accessed June 2026 TOS ↗

The buyer-risk fact to weigh hardest is the refund policy. The terms state plainly: “No Refunds. Payments are non-refundable and there are no refunds or credits for partially used periods.” Cancellation is the user's responsibility and must be done in-app via the Billing tab; an email or phone request is not considered cancellation. Access continues to the end of the paid period, with no proration, and price changes require 30 days notice. This is a recurring subscription that runs until you cancel correctly. The 7-day trial softens this, but the no-refund stance means you should use that trial deliberately.

What traders say

Sentiment on GoCharting is genuinely mixed and the sample is smaller than the 3M+ traders claim would suggest. Trustpilot sits around 2.6 to 3.1 out of 5 across sources on only about 18 reviews, which is a thin and volatile base; the company does respond to reviews. Google Play is warmer at roughly 3.8 (2,360 reviews against 1M-plus installs), Chrome-Stats around 3.85, the iOS app around 2.9, and India-skewed Techjockey at 4.2 on a dozen reviews. Editorial third-party reviews tend to run warmer still. We weight this carefully: low review counts and India-heavy samples can distort, and warmer editorial scores can carry affiliate incentives.

The positive themes are consistent and credible: professional-grade order flow, footprint, Volume and Market Profile, DOM and CVD in one browser-based tool; genuine multi-asset coverage; strong affordability and an unusually deep free tier versus TradingView; and cloud-saved, customizable layouts. Across third-party aggregators, users describe the charting as comparable to TradingView at a fraction of the cost. We could not independently verify a specific positive Trustpilot quote, so we present that as aggregate sentiment rather than a verbatim review. The negatives are equally consistent and are the more important signal. Performance complaints recur: slowness, browser crashes, and memory exhaustion. One directly verified review captures the theme: “first of all for simple user its slow, constantly running out of memory and crashes in browser” (Simas, Techjockey, 1.5/5, November 2025). Users also report real-time data lag, slow or absent support, mobile limitations, weak backtesting, and a smaller script community than TradingView's. These are not isolated gripes; they are the dominant negative pattern, and they sit directly against the platform's value proposition as a fast, data-heavy terminal.

Third-Party Review ScoresAggregated from external sources
PlatformScoreSampleSource
Google Play~3.8 / 52,360 reviews (1M+ installs)Source ↗
Techjockey4.2 / 512 reviews (India-skewed sample)Source ↗
Trustpilot~2.7 / 5~18 reviews (small, variable sample)Source ↗
Aggregate~3.0 / 5mixed across Google Play, Trustpilot, iOS and TechjockeyNormalized by TheFXGeek
Community SentimentOne representative positive, one critical

Across third-party aggregators, users describe the charting as comparable to TradingView at a fraction of the cost, praising the order-flow tooling and the unusually generous free tier.

Community sentiment, Aggregated (Google Play, Chrome-Stats, Techjockey; Trustpilot 403-blocked, no single verbatim quote independently confirmed), 2026 source ↗

first of all for simple user its slow, constantly running out of memory and crashes in browser

Simas, Techjockey (1.5-star review), Nov 2025 source ↗

Pros & cons

The balance below reflects a transparent, capable terminal undercut by performance, support, and forex-specific gaps. The strengths are about honesty and feature depth; the weaknesses are about reliability, disclosure, and the fact that forex is not where this product is strongest.

Pros
  • Unusually deep free tier (real-time charts, profiles, options chain, Bar Replay) with no card required
  • Ships no buy/sell signals and makes no win-rate or accuracy claim
  • Candid, documented stance on repainting instead of false non-repainting marketing
  • Professional order-flow suite (footprint, CVD, Market/Volume Profile, DOM) at $20/month
  • Genuine multi-asset coverage with cloud-saved customizable layouts
  • Lipi scripting plus price, indicator, and webhook alerts
  • Subscription-only with a real 7-day trial and no lifetime gimmick
Cons
  • Recurring performance complaints: slowness, browser crashes, memory issues, and data lag
  • Strict no-refund policy with cancel-only-in-app terms
  • 2018 privacy policy silent on encryption and broker-credential handling despite 20+ integrations
  • Forex is secondary: FX data vendor undisclosed and no forex order flow/footprint
  • No Pine Script, MT4/MT5, or external API; smaller script community than TradingView

GoCharting vs alternatives

The natural comparison is TradingView. TradingView wins on raw speed, ecosystem, Pine Script, and community size, and its free tier is the genre benchmark. GoCharting counters on two fronts: it bundles serious order-flow tooling (footprint, CVD, DOM, Volume Profile) that TradingView reserves for higher tiers or omits, and at $20/month for Crypto/Forex Premium it is cheaper than TradingView's comparable paid plans. For a futures or crypto trader who wants order flow without a dedicated platform like Sierra Chart or Bookmap, GoCharting is a credible, lower-cost middle ground.

For a pure forex trader, the comparison tilts back. The free built-in indicators on MT4, MT5, or TradingView already cover price action, RSI, MACD, and VWAP, and GoCharting does not bring forex order flow to the table to justify the upgrade. Add the undisclosed FX data source and the platform-lock (no MT4/MT5), and a forex-only trader gets less differentiated value here than a futures or crypto trader does.

How GoCharting compares to the next tools in our indicators & screeners ranking:

MetricGoChartingFinvizMarket Cipher
Our score7.0/107.4/103.8/10
Starting priceFree tier; Crypto/Forex Premium $20/moFree tier; Elite $39.50/mo or $299.50/yr$600/yr or $1,500 lifetime; no free tier or trial
Best forBrowser-based order-flow charting for futures and crypto tradersFast, deep US-equity and ETF screening on a budgetTradingView crypto traders who want the Market Cipher visual style as discretionary context
RegulationOffshoreOffshoreOffshore
Full reviewThis pageFinviz review →Market Cipher review →

In short: Finviz edges ahead of GoCharting in the overall ranking, but browser-based order-flow charting for futures and crypto traders is where GoCharting makes its strongest case.

Who is GoCharting for?

Use GoCharting if…

Use GoCharting if you trade futures or crypto and want professional order-flow and Volume Profile tooling in a browser without paying Sierra Chart or Bookmap prices; if you value an honest vendor that makes no signal claims; or if you want a genuinely useful free charting tier to evaluate before paying. The free tier alone is enough to test whether the terminal fits your workflow.

Skip it if…

Skip it if you are a forex-only trader who needs order flow, since it is not advertised for FX and the data source is undisclosed; if your workflow depends on MT4, MT5, or Pine Script; if you cannot tolerate browser performance issues on a data-heavy chart; or if a strict no-refund policy and a thin, mixed review base are dealbreakers.

Final verdict

GoCharting is one of the more honest products in a category full of hype. It ships no signals, claims no win rate, documents repainting candidly, and prices a real order-flow suite at $20 a month with a generous free tier on top. That transparency, plus genuine feature depth, carries it to a solid score. It is held back by recurring performance and support complaints, a strict no-refund policy, a privacy policy that has not kept pace with its broker integrations, and the simple fact that forex is a secondary, data-vendor-undisclosed slice of a futures-and-crypto-centric platform. For order-flow traders in futures and crypto, it is well worth a free-tier trial. For forex-only traders, the case is weaker. We score it 7.0 out of 10.

Ready to try it?
GoCharting, score 7/10

A transparent, feature-deep multi-asset charting and order-flow terminal at a fair price, where forex is a secondary, data-vendor-undisclosed offering. Open a demo account to try the platform risk-free, then fund a live account when you're ready. Trading carries risk.

Try GoCharting

Frequently asked questions

Yes. There is a free tier at $0/month, forever, with no credit card required. It includes real-time charts, Market and Volume Profile, an options chain (32 strikes), and free Bar Replay, but limits you to 1 device and locks footprint and order-flow tools behind Premium.
For futures and crypto traders who want order-flow tooling (footprint, CVD, DOM) in a browser, the $20/month Crypto/Forex Premium plan is competitive value versus TradingView and dedicated order-flow platforms. For forex-only traders it is a weaker case, since forex order flow is not advertised and the FX data vendor is undisclosed.
GoCharting ships no proprietary buy/sell signals, so there is no signal product to repaint. Its own docs candidly state that over 95% of indicators repaint to some degree and that you cannot have both real-time signal accuracy and zero repainting. The company does not claim any tool is non-repainting.
No. GoCharting is a self-contained terminal. It does not run on TradingView, MT4, or MT5, and it supports no Pine Script or external charting API. It can connect to some brokers (including XChief MT4/5 and Pepperstone UK) for execution, but the analysis happens inside GoCharting.
Forex (50+ major/minor/exotic pairs), CME futures (100+ contracts), crypto (1000+ instruments via Binance/Bybit/Coinbase), Indian NSE/BSE/MCX, and US equities (real-time Coming Soon). Its order-flow identity is centered on futures and crypto, not forex.
It is subscription-only. There is no lifetime or one-time plan. Paid tiers start at $20/month (Crypto/Forex Premium), with monthly and annual billing.
Yes, a 7-day self-serve trial is available on the pricing page, with an option to skip the trial and pay now. Whether a credit card is required to start the trial is not disclosed.
None is claimed. GoCharting publishes no win-rate, accuracy, or ROI figures anywhere, because it ships no signal product. The absence of such claims is a transparency positive, not an omission.
It does not give proprietary buy/sell signals. It does offer configurable alerts on price, indicators, and custom Lipi conditions, delivered by push, email, or webhook, plus the real-time Power Trades Scanner for large-block trades.
It is a legitimate product operated by Procharting Private Limited (India, incorporated 2021), with no regulator or consumer warning naming it. Sentiment is mixed, with sub-3 Trustpilot/iOS scores and recurring complaints about speed and support, but the platform makes no false performance claims.
Cancel in-app via the Billing tab; an email or phone request does not count as cancellation. There are no refunds: terms state payments are non-refundable with no credit for partially used periods, though access continues to the end of the current billing period.

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