VOL. XCIV, NO. 247

★ BEST INVESTING TOOLS COMPARISON ★

NO ADVICE

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Tool Comparison

Investing.com vs Stockopedia comparison

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

Investing.com logo

Investing.com

investing.com

PricingFree, Subscription
PlatformsWeb, Mobile
Hands-on review
Stockopedia logo

Stockopedia

stockopedia.com

PricingSubscription
PlatformsWeb, Mobile
Editor's pickHands-on review
Top 50 Investing ToolsThe global ranking of the best investing tools, ranked by community votes.

At a glance

Platforms
Investing.comWeb, Mobile
StockopediaWeb, Mobile
Categories
Investing.com20
Stockopedia17
Pricing details

Tool

Investing.com

Starting price

Free tierYes
Free trial

Plans & pricing

FreeFree
InvestingPro — ProSubscription
InvestingPro — Pro+Subscription

Tool

Stockopedia

Starting price

Free tierNo
Free trial14 days

Plans & pricing

UKSubscription
UK & USSubscription
Custom (regions)Subscription

Vote sentiment comparison

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Platform details

AttributeInvesting.comStockopedia
Asset types
StocksETFsBondsCommoditiesCurrenciesCryptosFundsFuturesOptionsOther
StocksETFsClosed-End Funds
Experience
BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced
BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced
Regions
North AmericaEuropeAPACLatAmMiddle EastAfrica
EuropeNorth AmericaAPAC
Data freshness
Not specified
15-min DelayedEnd of Day
API access
Not specifiedNot specified
Export formats
CSVXML
CSVExcel

Coverage overlap

Investing.com strengths7

Categories covered by Investing.com only.

Stockopedia strengths4

Categories covered by Stockopedia only.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between Investing.com and Stockopedia?

Investing.com focuses on News, Alerts, and Calendar while Stockopedia specializes in Screeners, Stock Ideas, and Financials. They overlap in 13 categories, so choose based on your preferred workflow and pricing.

Is Investing.com or Stockopedia free to use?

Investing.com offers a free tier that lets you get started without paying, while Stockopedia requires a subscription. If budget is a concern, start with Investing.com and upgrade later if you need more advanced features.

Should I choose Investing.com or Stockopedia?

Choose Investing.com if you need Multi-asset market data site/app with quotes, charts, news and tools; claims coverage across stocks, commodities, crypto, indices, currencies, bonds, funds, interest rates, ETFs, futures and options., and Cross-device alerts: customized price alerts on any instrument plus alerts for selected economic events; managed via an Alert Center on web and apps.. Go with Stockopedia if Equity screener with more than 350 ratios and over 65 prebuilt “GuruScreens.”, and StockRanks™ system rates every stock on Quality, Value, and Momentum, with additional risk ratings and style classifications. better fits how you invest.

What asset classes do Investing.com and Stockopedia cover?

Both cover Stocks, and ETFs. Investing.com also includes Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Cryptos, Funds, Futures, Options, and Other. Stockopedia adds coverage for Closed-End Funds.

Can I export data from Investing.com and Stockopedia?

Both platforms let you export data to spreadsheets (CSV). This is useful for custom analysis or record-keeping.

Which has a better stock screener—Investing.com or Stockopedia?

Both Investing.com and Stockopedia include stock screeners. Try each to see which filtering options and interface you prefer.

Can I track my portfolio with Investing.com or Stockopedia?

Both platforms include portfolio tracking, so you can monitor your holdings, performance, and allocation in one place.

Keep Exploring

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.