8 Best Finviz Alternatives for Fundamental Investors (2026)

Finviz's heatmap and free filters are still the fastest way to scan the market. Here are 8 real alternatives — including Tessera Alpha's sector-relative scoring — for when you need something deeper.

9 min read

Finviz is usually the first screener anyone tries. It's free, it's fast, and the market heatmap has become the default mental image a lot of investors have of "what's happening today." If you just want to filter US stocks by P/E, market cap, or RSI and see the result instantly, Finviz still does that better than almost anything else — that's not a knock, it's the honest starting point for this guide.

But "filter a list" and "decide what to actually hold" are different jobs, and Finviz was built for the first one. This guide covers 8 tools people search for when Finviz's absolute filters and screen-level backtesting stop being enough: places to get systematic scoring, deeper fundamentals, better charting, or analyst-driven research, depending on what you're missing.

TL;DR comparison

ToolBest forScreening approachPricing (approx)
Tessera AlphaSystematic, sector-relative stock selection24-factor quality score + sector-relative P/E rankingFree tier + paid (see /pricing)
Stock RoverPower-user screening + portfolio tracking~650 fundamental/technical metricsFree, Essentials ~$80/yr, Premium ~$180/yr+
KoyfinResearch dashboards + macro contextCustom dashboards, not filter-firstFree tier, Plus ~$49/mo, Pro higher
TradingViewCharting + trading communityTechnical screeners, Pine Script filtersFree tier, paid tiers roughly $10–60/mo
WallStreetZenAnalyst-driven due diligenceZen Ratings (A–F) + checklistsFree tier + paid plans (check current pricing)
Simply Wall StVisual, long-term beginner researchSnowflake scoring across 5 dimensionsFree, Premium and Unlimited tiers
ChartMillBlending technicals with fundamentalsTechnical setups + fundamental health filtersFree tier + paid tiers (check current pricing)
TIKRGlobal fundamentals terminalFinancial statement + estimate filtersFree tier + paid plans (check current pricing)

#1 Tessera Alpha

Tessera Alpha starts from a different question than most screeners: not "which stocks pass this list of absolute filters" but "how does this stock's quality and valuation compare to its actual peers, and would a rule built around that have held up historically." Every stock in the US universe gets a 24-factor quality score — profitability, balance-sheet strength, earnings quality, capital efficiency — and a valuation read that's sector-relative: a bank trading at a P/E of 9 in a sector that runs at 13 registers as cheap, while a staples name at 22 in an 18 sector registers as expensive. A single absolute P/E cutoff can't make that distinction; Finviz's <15 filter treats both the same way.

The other piece that separates Tessera from a pure screener is honest backtesting. You can take a scoring rule and run it against point-in-time universes with as-reported financials — no survivorship bias from stocks that later got delisted, no look-ahead from financials that were later restated. That matters because a lot of "backtests" circulating online quietly cheat on both. The whole US universe, roughly 4,000+ names, gets rescanned weekly, so scores reflect current data rather than a stale snapshot. There's a free tier to explore the screener, with paid tiers unlocking the backtester and the full signal set — see /pricing. If you want the systematic version of what Finviz's filters are trying to do, this is that. Read the fuller comparison at Tessera vs Finviz, or see how sector-relative valuation looks across the market at P/E ratio by sector.

Where Tessera falls short:

  • US equities only. No forex, crypto, or international listings — Finviz and several tools below cover more asset classes and geographies.
  • No real-time intraday data. Tessera is built for weekly rebalancing, not minute-by-minute price action.
  • No native charting or heatmap. There's no visual "what's moving right now" view — that's Finviz's home turf, and Tessera doesn't try to compete with it.
  • Younger product, smaller community. Finviz has a decade-plus of tutorials and forum answers; Tessera doesn't have that yet.

Full product overview: Finviz alternative: Tessera Alpha.

#2 Stock Rover

Stock Rover is the deepest fundamentals-and-portfolio tool on this list, with roughly 650 screening metrics, ten-plus years of historical financials rendered inline, and direct brokerage import for tax-lot tracking. If your workflow is "build a custom screen across dozens of metrics, then track the results alongside my actual holdings," Stock Rover is purpose-built for that loop in a way Finviz isn't. The tradeoff is that its backtesting stays at the screen level — it tells you how a filter rule would have performed, not how a full rotation-and-exit strategy would have, and there's no regime-aware position sizing layered on top. Pricing runs free at the base tier, with Essentials around $80/year and Premium tiers upward of $180–280/year, billed annually. See the fuller comparison at Tessera vs Stock Rover.

#3 Koyfin

Koyfin is often called "Bloomberg lite," and that's a fair description — customizable dashboards spanning equities, macro data, FX, and fixed income, plus solid analyst-estimate tracking. It's a research and browsing tool first, not a filter-first screener, so if you're coming from Finviz expecting a similar quick-filter workflow, Koyfin will feel like a different product entirely. It has no backtesting and no systematic scoring layer. Pricing starts with a real free tier, Koyfin Plus around $49/month, and Pro at a higher tier for professional users. More detail at Tessera vs Koyfin.

#4 TradingView

TradingView is the default for charting and trading community features — custom indicators via Pine Script, a huge library of user-built strategies and studies, and social feeds where people share setups and publish public scripts you can fork. Its screener is genuinely capable for technical filtering, and multi-asset coverage (crypto, forex, futures) is broader than Finviz's. What it isn't built for is fundamental quality scoring or portfolio-level backtesting of a long-term equity strategy — its backtester is designed around chart-based trading strategies, not multi-year fundamental rotation, and it doesn't rank a universe by quality or sector-relative valuation the way a fundamental screener does. Pricing runs a usable free tier with paid tiers roughly in the $10–60/month range depending on features and billing cycle (check current pricing on their site).

#5 WallStreetZen

WallStreetZen's signature is Zen Ratings — an A-through-F composite that folds in analyst estimates, momentum, and fundamentals — paired with a due-diligence checklist that walks you through whether a stock is worth researching further. If your process leans on knowing what sell-side analysts expect, WallStreetZen surfaces that more directly than Finviz does. It has no portfolio backtester, and the rating blends analyst consensus into the score itself, which makes it harder to use analyst views as an independent cross-check. Pricing includes a free tier with paid plans on top (check current pricing). Full comparison: Tessera vs WallStreetZen.

#6 Simply Wall St

Simply Wall St's Snowflake chart — five dimensions (value, future, past, health, dividends) visualized on one diagram — is one of the best ways for a newer investor to build intuition about a stock fast, and its global coverage extends well past Finviz's US-and-major-exchange focus. Narrative write-ups explain the numbers in plain language, and warning flags catch common red flags like excessive debt. What it doesn't have is a portfolio backtester or a systematic rotation/exit framework — it evaluates one stock at a time rather than ranking a universe against your rules. Pricing spans a limited free tier, a Premium plan, and an Unlimited tier that removes usage caps (check current pricing).

#7 ChartMill

ChartMill sits in an interesting niche: it blends technical setups (breakouts, trend patterns, relative strength) with fundamental health filters in one screener, which suits investors who want a valuation and quality check before acting on a chart signal. It's a reasonable middle ground between Finviz's technical/fundamental filter mix and a pure charting tool, with backtesting available for technical trading rules specifically and pre-built screens for common technical setups. It doesn't offer sector-relative valuation ranking or a multi-factor quality composite the way Tessera does, and its US-plus-select-international coverage is narrower than TIKR's or Koyfin's. Pricing includes a free tier with paid tiers on top (check current pricing).

#8 TIKR

TIKR is a genuine global fundamentals terminal — 50,000+ securities, deep multi-year financial statement histories, and a consensus-estimate timeline that shows how analyst forecasts for revenue and EPS have moved over time. If your research regularly extends outside US equities, or you build your own DCF models and want the underlying data pre-populated, TIKR goes further than Finviz ever tries to. It has no backtester and no composite quality score — it's built for single-company research depth, not systematic screening. Pricing includes a real free tier with paid plans that unlock fuller estimate histories (check current pricing). Full comparison: Tessera vs TIKR.

How to choose

Match the tool to the job, not the other way around. Day-trading or intraday watchlists: Finviz or TradingView — Tessera and most tools on this list aren't built for minute-by-minute decisions. A quick visual "what's moving today": Finviz's heatmap, still unbeaten for this. Global or international coverage: TIKR, Koyfin, or Simply Wall St — Tessera is US-only. Deep single-company fundamentals or DCF building: Stock Rover or TIKR. Analyst consensus and price targets: WallStreetZen or Koyfin. Beginner-friendly visual learning: Simply Wall St. Systematic, rules-based screening with sector-relative valuation and honest backtesting: that's the gap Tessera fills. Plenty of investors reasonably use two of these together — Finviz in the morning for the market pulse, Tessera on the weekend for the actual rebalance.

FAQ

Is there a free Finviz alternative? Yes, several. Finviz's own free tier is hard to beat for basic filtering, but Tessera Alpha, TradingView, Koyfin, Simply Wall St, and TIKR all offer usable free tiers too — the difference is in what each free tier unlocks. Tessera's free tier lets you explore the screener and scores; backtesting and full signal access are paid.

What's the best Finviz alternative for value investors? If "value" means an absolute P/E or P/B cutoff, Finviz already does that well. If it means comparing a stock's valuation to its own sector rather than the whole market — which avoids flagging every bank as "cheap" and every software stock as "expensive" — Tessera Alpha's sector-relative ranking is built specifically for that. See P/E ratio by sector.

What's the best Finviz alternative for real-time charting or day trading? TradingView, by a wide margin, or Finviz Elite itself if you want to stay in one product. Tessera doesn't compete here — it has no real-time intraday data and isn't designed for that holding period.

Does Tessera Alpha replace Finviz's heatmap? No, and it isn't trying to. Tessera has no native charting or heatmap view. If a fast visual scan of today's market is part of your routine, keep Finviz (or TradingView) for that and use Tessera for the weekly, rules-based side of the decision.

Can I use Finviz and Tessera Alpha together? Yes, and a lot of people effectively do. A reasonable split: Finviz for the daily heatmap and intraday watchlist scans, Tessera for the weekly rebalance — running the screener, checking factor scores, reviewing signal changes, and deciding what to hold. The two workflows barely overlap once you draw the line that way.

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