
TradingView has been the go-to charting platform for millions of traders, and in early 2026 the company made its biggest push into artificial intelligence. Over the span of just one week in late March and early April, TradingView launched three distinct AI features: AI-powered document summaries, AI-powered corporate news, and AI Chart Copilot.1 These tools are designed to help traders analyze company filings faster, stay on top of market-moving events, and interact with charts using natural language.
Whether you are a fundamental analyst digging through SEC filings or a technical trader scanning charts for setups, these new AI capabilities change how you can gather and act on information within TradingView. Here is what each feature does, how it works, and how you can combine AI-driven insights with automated trade execution.
The first AI feature TradingView introduced is a rebuilt Documents tab with AI-powered summaries of company disclosures.1 Previously, the Documents tab on a stock's symbol page was a flat list of filings that required you to open each one individually to understand its contents. Now, every document gets an AI-generated summary that appears directly in the document list, so you can quickly scan what matters without opening every filing.
The AI document summaries work with the full range of SEC filings that public US companies submit:
When you open a stock's Documents tab, you will see "quick insights" next to each filing showing the core message at a glance. Opening a document reveals a comprehensive AI-generated summary that highlights the key points, financial figures, and notable changes. You can jump from the summary to the original filing text to verify any detail.1
The Documents tab has also been reorganized. Earnings reports (quarterly and annual reports plus transcripts) are now separated from corporate events (M&A announcements, investor presentations), replacing the old flat "All" view. Single-click filters let you narrow down by document type.
AI summaries are currently available for US companies with SEC filings. TradingView specifically highlights companies like Nvidia, Meta, Netflix, Amazon, Tesla, Apple, and Microsoft as examples, though coverage extends across publicly traded US stocks.1
One important limitation: AI summaries only cover documents filed from June 2024 onward. If you are researching a company's historical filings from before that date, you will not see AI-generated summaries for those older documents.
The second AI feature tackles one of the biggest challenges for active traders: keeping up with corporate news in real time. TradingView now uses AI to monitor SEC and regulatory filings as they are published and generates instant news summaries of critical corporate information.2
The key advantage is speed. Previously, financial news about SEC filings would take hours to appear through traditional news services, since human journalists needed to read, analyze, and write articles. TradingView's AI-powered news generates summaries within minutes of a filing being published.2 Each summary includes direct links to the original filing so you can verify the information yourself.
The AI news system covers seven categories of corporate events:2
You can customize the AI news feed using multiple filters. Combine your watchlists with specific event types and news providers to see only the information that matters to your trading. Push notification alerts can be set for matching stories, so you do not have to keep the news feed open to catch important filings.2
For traders who react to earnings surprises, insider buying patterns, or activist investor moves, getting this information minutes after filing rather than hours later can make a meaningful difference in how quickly you can act on new data.
The most ambitious of the three features is AI Chart Copilot, which launched as a public beta on April 2, 2026.3 Unlike the document and news features that are built into the TradingView platform, Chart Copilot is a Chrome browser extension that runs alongside your charts in a side panel.
Chart Copilot reads your current chart state in real time, including the active symbol, timeframe, indicators, and visible price range. You interact with it using natural language, and it responds with analysis, actions, or information.3
The core capabilities include:
AI Chart Copilot is available as a free Chrome extension called "TradingView Remix: AI Chart Copilot" on the Chrome Web Store.4 It works on Chrome and other Chromium-based browsers including Edge, Opera, Brave, and Vivaldi. Firefox and Safari are not supported.
One detail worth noting: the extension is developed by a third party (tvremix.xyz), not by TradingView directly, though TradingView promoted it on their official blog.3 Setup takes about 30 seconds: install the extension, open a TradingView chart, click the extension icon, and sign in with Google. No TradingView subscription is required to use it during the beta period.
During the free beta, users get 15 AI requests per day with no credit card required.3 TradingView has stated that daily usage limits may be adjusted to keep the service sustainable and free. No paid tier or pricing has been announced yet.
Fifteen requests per day can be consumed quickly by power users, so it is worth being intentional about which questions you ask. Broad analysis requests like "give me a full technical breakdown of AAPL" will use your budget more efficiently than asking multiple narrow questions separately.
There are important limitations to be aware of:
For traders who want to go beyond analysis into automated execution of AI-informed strategies, you will need to pair Chart Copilot's insights with a separate automation platform.
TradingView is not the only platform adding AI capabilities. Here is how Chart Copilot stacks up against other AI trading tools:
TradingView's advantage is clear: Chart Copilot is free during the beta, requires no setup beyond a browser extension, and is deeply integrated with the charting experience that traders already use. The tradeoff is that it is less powerful for strategy automation, backtesting, and trade execution compared to these specialized paid platforms.
The broader shift toward AI in trading means these tools will likely get more capable over time. What matters now is understanding how to use them effectively within your existing workflow.
Each of these AI features generates insights, but none of them can execute trades on their own. This is where connecting TradingView to an automation platform like TradersPost closes the gap between analysis and action.
AI Chart Copilot's alert management capability is particularly useful here. You can use conversational commands to create alerts based on the AI's technical analysis, and those TradingView alerts can then trigger automated trades through TradingView's webhook system connected to TradersPost.
For example, if Chart Copilot identifies a bullish RSI divergence on a stock you are watching, you can ask it to set an alert. When that alert fires, a webhook sends the signal to TradersPost, which executes the trade in your connected brokerage account. This creates a workflow where AI handles the analysis and pattern detection, while automation handles the execution.
The AI-powered news summaries can also inform your automated strategies. When an earnings report surfaces an unexpected beat or miss within minutes of filing, you can react faster than traders relying on traditional news sources. Combine this with TradersPost strategies that respond to earnings events, and you have an edge in time-sensitive situations.
The document summaries serve a different but equally important role. Rather than triggering immediate trades, they help you build conviction in longer-term positions. Quickly scanning quarterly reports and earnings transcripts across multiple companies lets you identify trends and confirm your thesis before deploying capital through automated strategies.
If you are already using AI coding tools to build trading strategies, adding TradingView's native AI features gives you another layer of intelligence without leaving the charting platform.
Here is how to start using each feature today:
All three features are currently free to use. The document summaries and news features are integrated directly into TradingView with no additional setup. Chart Copilot requires the browser extension but takes less than a minute to install.
TradingView's AI push signals a clear direction: the platform is evolving from a pure charting and analysis tool into an AI-assisted trading research environment. The three features address different parts of the trading workflow — fundamental research with document summaries, real-time awareness with AI news, and technical analysis with Chart Copilot.
For now, these features are best used as supplements to your existing process rather than replacements. The document and news AI tools are straightforward and immediately useful for fundamental analysis. Chart Copilot is more experimental in beta but offers a glimpse of where conversational chart analysis is heading.
The most powerful approach is combining these AI insights with automated execution. TradingView gives you the analysis layer, and platforms like TradersPost give you the execution layer. Together, they let you move from insight to action faster than either tool alone.
1 TradingView Blog — Smarter, faster, and AI-powered documents
2 TradingView Blog — Instant AI-powered corporate news on TradingView
3 TradingView Blog — TradingView AI Chart Copilot: public beta is available now
4 Chrome Web Store — TradingView Remix: AI Chart Copilot