Chartink runs the scan. TradingView draws the chart. The problem is the gap between them: Chartink's stock
links open Chartink's own dashboard, not the TradingView chart you actually want to read. So every scan turns
into the same ritual — read a symbol, switch tabs, type NSE:SYMBOL into TradingView's search, repeat
for every stock in the list.
There are three ways to close that gap. Two are built into the platforms themselves; one automates the whole thing. Here's each, with the honest trade-offs.
Method 1 — Search each symbol manually
Retype the ticker in TradingView's symbol search
- Run your scan on Chartink and note the stock symbol, e.g.
NESTLEIND. - Switch to your TradingView tab and press / or click the symbol box.
- Type the symbol — pick the
NSE:(orBSE:) listing from the dropdown. - Go back to Chartink for the next stock. Repeat.
It works, and it's fine for one or two stocks. But a typical scan returns 15–40 results. At roughly ten seconds per symbol you're spending five minutes a day on pure typing — and one fat-fingered ticker sends you to the wrong company entirely.
Method 2 — Import the scan as a TradingView watchlist
Copy the symbols out, import a list into TradingView
- On your Chartink scan results, copy the symbol column (or export the results table).
- In a text editor, prefix every symbol with
NSE:and join them with commas —NSE:NESTLEIND,NSE:AXISBANK,NSE:SHREECEM— and save as a.txtfile. - In TradingView, open the watchlist panel → ⋯ menu → Import list and select the file.
- Click through the imported watchlist to chart each stock.
Good when you want the whole scan parked in TradingView for the session. The downsides: it's a multi-step export every single time the scan updates, intraday scans go stale in minutes, and free TradingView accounts only get one watchlist — importing can clutter or replace it.
Method 3 — One-click redirect with a free extension
Click the stock on Chartink, land on its TradingView chart
Chartink Redirector is a free, 19 KB Chrome extension built for exactly this workflow. Once installed, every stock link on Chartink opens straight on TradingView — symbol already resolved to the right NSE listing — instead of Chartink's own dashboard.
- Install it from the Chrome Web Store (free, no account).
- Click the extension icon and tick TradingView — and, if you want fundamentals too, Screener.in.
- Click any stock in your scan. It opens on every platform you ticked, each in its own reusable tab — so forty clicks still means two tabs, not forty.
Bonus: on any Screener.in or TradingView page, Ctrl+Q flips between the chart and the fundamentals page for the same stock. The stock you clicked stays highlighted on Chartink, so you never lose your place in the scan.
The three methods, side by side
If you only check the occasional stock, manual search is honestly fine. If you batch-review end-of-day scans, the watchlist import earns its clunkiness. But if your workflow is the classic one — scan on Chartink, chart on TradingView, fundamentals on whichever platform fits — the redirect extension removes the busywork entirely.
Quick questions
Can Chartink connect to TradingView directly? +
Do I need a paid TradingView plan for this? +
Does this work for Screener.in as well? +
Ctrl+Q switches between the chart and the fundamentals page for the same stock.Try the one-click version
Free, 19 KB, no account, no data collection. Your next Chartink scan opens itself.
Add Chartink Redirector to Chrome