Register via our exclusive referral link for permanent fee discounts — Sign Up →
All Registration KYC App Deposit P2P Futures Security Earn
Trading Tools

How to Use Binance TradingView Charts: Drawings, Indicators, and Multi-Timeframe Analysis

· ~ 16 min read · ChainKer Editorial Team

Quick Answer: Binance Web Pro Mode Embeds the Full TradingView Chart for Free

Many users don't realize that Binance's web spot and futures Pro mode embeds the full TradingView chart component. Almost every advanced TradingView feature is available right inside the Binance interface, with no TradingView subscription required. This article shows you how to make full use of it. If you don't have an account yet, register on Binance first, then access the web from a desktop browser (the mobile App charts are a simplified version). You can also download the App for the simplified version.

How to Open the Full Chart

  1. Sign in to Binance from a desktop browser
  2. Trade → choose Spot or Futures
  3. Enter Pro / Classic mode
  4. The big block in the middle is the TradingView chart
  5. Hover over the TradingView label in the top-right of the chart to confirm

Pro mode is more feature-complete than Classic mode — all advanced techniques live in Pro.

Switching Timeframes

The toolbar at the top of the chart has a timeframe selector:

  • Seconds (1s): ultra-short-term traders
  • Minutes (1m / 5m / 15m / 30m): short-term / intraday
  • Hours (1h / 2h / 4h / 12h): swing
  • Daily (1D): medium-to-long term
  • Weekly (1W) / Monthly (1M): long-term and value investing

Professionals typically watch multiple timeframes at once: daily for direction, 4-hour for ranges, 15-minute for entry. This is called "multi-timeframe analysis."

Drawing Tools in Practice

The vertical toolbar on the left, top to bottom:

Trend Line

The most-used tool. Connect two lows for an uptrend line, two highs for a downtrend line — pullbacks to a trend line are a common entry signal.

How to draw: click the trend line tool → click the start point on the chart → drag to the end point → click again to confirm.

Horizontal Line

Mark key support / resistance. Areas with heavy historical trade volume often become important horizontal levels.

Rectangle

Outline ranges or consolidation boxes. Trade the range while price oscillates inside; trade the trend when price breaks out.

Fibonacci Retracement

Drag from the start of a move to its end and the tool auto-draws the 0.236, 0.382, 0.5, 0.618, and 0.786 retracement levels. The 0.5 and 0.618 levels are common buy-back zones.

Text Annotations

Drop notes on the chart, like "Daily breakout" or "X days to halving." These annotations persist when viewing across multiple synced devices.

Deleting Drawings

Select a drawing and press Delete, or right-click → Delete. Right-click → Clear All wipes every drawing at once.

Adding Indicators

How to Add

Top of chart → Indicators (fx) button → search by name → click to add.

Must-Know Indicators

Moving Averages (MA) The most basic trend indicator. Common settings are MA20 (short), MA60 (medium), MA200 (long). Price holding above MA200 is widely treated as a bull-market signal.

MACD A momentum indicator. A golden cross (DIF crossing above DEA) is typically a buy signal; a death cross is the opposite. The histogram reflects momentum strength.

RSI Relative Strength Index, between 0 and 100. Above 70 is considered overbought, below 30 oversold — often used to flag short-term reversals.

Bollinger Bands (BOLL) A volatility indicator. Price touching the upper band tends to retrace; touching the lower band tends to bounce — but the bands lose effectiveness in strong trends.

Volume Already pinned at the bottom of the chart by default. Rising price on rising volume = real breakout; rising price on falling volume = false breakout. Price-volume confluence is a foundation of technical analysis.

Tweaking Indicator Parameters

Double-click the indicator name → parameter panel → modify period or color. Default parameters may not fit every timeframe — small tweaks help.

Removing Indicators

Click the indicator name on the chart → look for the eye icon and the × → click × to remove.

Multi-Timeframe Layouts

The top-right of the Binance web chart has a multi-chart layout option:

  • 1 chart (default)
  • 2 charts (split horizontally or vertically)
  • 3, 4, or more windows

Recommended Layout

  • Left: daily, for the big picture
  • Center: 4-hour, for swings
  • Right: 15-minute, for precise entries

When all three timeframes align, you have the strongest signal — for example, all three above MA20 means the trend is unmistakable.

Synchronized Switching

When you switch coin, all windows switch together — no need to change the pair on each chart individually.

Saving Templates

Once your drawings, indicators, and layout are set:

  1. Top-right of the chart → Save icon
  2. Name the template (e.g., "Swing Template," "Intraday Template")
  3. Next time → Load Template

Different setups for different scenarios, switchable instantly — the productivity boost is significant.

Useful Keyboard Shortcuts (Web)

  • Alt + T: Add trend line
  • Alt + H: Add horizontal line
  • Alt + V: Add vertical line
  • Ctrl + Z: Undo
  • Ctrl + Y: Redo
  • Mouse wheel: Zoom chart
  • Drag empty area: Pan chart
  • Shift + wheel: Horizontal zoom

Pro Techniques

Volume-Price Analysis

Volume is the most direct "market sentiment gauge." A big bullish candle is only meaningful with big volume — otherwise it's likely a bull trap.

Identifying Support / Resistance

A price level that's been tested multiple times without breaking = strong resistance/support. Mark the 3–5 most important levels with horizontal lines; watch only those.

Trend Lines + Indicators Combo

The classic combo: trend lines for direction + RSI for overbought/oversold + MACD for momentum. When all three confirm, win rate peaks.

Multi-Timeframe Method for Swing Traders

  1. Weekly / daily for the major trend
  2. 4-hour for pullback-buy or bounce-sell zones
  3. 1-hour for execution price
  4. 15-minute for stop-loss / take-profit placement

This workflow is essentially the shared language of professional traders.

Common Questions

Is the Binance chart the same as TradingView's website?

Binance embeds TradingView's "Advanced Charts" component. Most core features are present, but a few high-end features (custom Pine Script, community-shared indicators) require subscribing on the TradingView website itself.

Do mobile App charts have these features?

The App is a simplified version — basic drawings, common indicators, and a single chart are supported. Multi-window layouts, template saving, and Pine Script require the desktop web.

Will my drawings still be there next time?

Binance keeps them for a period of time, but cloud sync isn't 100% reliable. For important analysis, take a screenshot.

What if the chart is laggy?

Switch to Classic mode for better performance. Or remove some indicators and drawings — too many layers slow rendering.

Is the chart paid?

Completely free. Binance has no "VIP-unlock chart" gimmick — every account tier gets full features.

Mastering the Binance TradingView chart is essentially getting a professional-grade charting suite for free. Combined with proper drawing, indicators, and multi-timeframe layouts, your technical-analysis ability gets a noticeable boost.


Get Started Now

Ready to begin? Sign up for Binance now and enjoy exclusive trading fee discounts.

Or download the Binance app and manage your crypto on the go.

Sign Up on Binance Now
Use our referral link to get permanent trading fee discounts

Download Binance App and Start Trading

Android APK direct download, no VPN required. iOS requires a non-China Apple ID.