VOL. XCIV, NO. 247

★ BEST INVESTING TOOLS COMPARISON ★

NO ADVICE

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Tool Comparison

DivTracker vs The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) comparison

Compare pricing, supported platforms, categories, and standout capabilities to decide which tool fits your workflow.

DivTracker logo

DivTracker

divtracker.app

PricingFree, Subscription
PlatformsWeb, Mobile
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) logo

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)

wsj.com

PricingFree, Subscription
PlatformsWeb, Mobile

Comparison highlights

  • Tool score: the chart below shows community vote sentiment over the last 8 weeks. Use it as a signal, not a verdict.
  • Overlap: both cover Dividends, Calendar, and Alerts and 1 other categories.
  • Coverage tilt: DivTracker has 3 categories you won't get in The Wall Street Journal (WSJ); The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) has 4 unique categories.

Category leaders

  • Portfolio: DivTracker is tagged for this workflow; The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) has no category votes yet.
  • News: not enough category votes yet to call a leader.

Vote sentiment comparison

Cumulative positive vote share. Loading fresh totals...

DivTrackerThe Wall Street Journal (WSJ)

Side-by-side metrics

AttributeDivTrackerThe Wall Street Journal (WSJ)
Asset types

Supported asset classes and universes

Stocks

Stocks, ETFs, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Commodities, Currencies

Experience levels

Who each product is built for

Beginner, Intermediate

Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced

Platforms

Where you can access the product

Web, Mobile

Web, Mobile

Pricing

High-level pricing models

Free, Subscription

Free, Subscription

Tested

Verified by hands-on testing inside Find My Moat

Not yet

Not yet

Editor pick

Featured inside curated shortlists

Standard listing

Standard listing

Coverage overlap

Shared categories

Categories where both tools offer overlapping coverage.

DivTracker strengths

Categories covered by DivTracker but not The Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) strengths

Categories covered by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) but not DivTracker.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which workflows do DivTracker and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) both support?

Both platforms cover Dividends, Calendar, Alerts, and News workflows, so you can research those use cases in either tool before digging into the feature differences below.

Do DivTracker and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) require subscriptions?

Both DivTracker and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) keep freemium access with optional paid upgrades, so you can trial each platform before committing.

How can you access DivTracker and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)?

Both DivTracker and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) support web and mobile access, making it easy to keep tabs on research away from the desk.

What unique strengths set the two platforms apart?

DivTracker differentiates itself with Track dividend income with daily/monthly/annual views and upcoming (confirmed + estimated) dividend payouts., Dividend calendar shows upcoming dividend payouts, ex-dates, and earnings dates; includes an Ex-Dividend Calendar for stocks going ex-dividend soon., and Portfolio tracking supports manual input; Ultimate plan adds US-only brokerage account linking. Brokerage integrations rely on Plaid or SnapTrade., whereas The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) stands out for Comprehensive business and markets reporting, plus a Market Data Center spanning indexes, stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, and mutual funds., Built-in calendars, including a downloadable U.S. economic calendar and an earnings calendar within Market Data., and Market lists and stats such as 52-week highs/lows, analyst upgrades/downgrades, and dividend pages..

Curation & Accuracy

This directory blends AI‑assisted discovery with human curation. Entries are reviewed, edited, and organized with the goal of expanding coverage and sharpening quality over time. Your feedback helps steer improvements (because no single human can capture everything all at once).

Details change. Pricing, features, and availability may be incomplete or out of date. Treat listings as a starting point and verify on the provider’s site before making decisions. If you spot an error or a gap, send a quick note and I’ll adjust.