Home/Import/TraderSync

Import TraderSync Trades to Vigil

TraderSync is a trade journaling platform that offers automatic broker import, trade replay, and performance analytics. It supports equities, options, futures, and forex across multiple brokers.

Reviewed against current importer coverage on Apr 2, 2026. This guide is indexable because the export path, expected fields, and common breakpoints are specific enough to help a trader verify a real import before saving it.

What Job Is This Guide Actually Solving?

The job is not just moving a TraderSync export into another dashboard. The job is preserving enough execution detail that you can audit old trades, verify risk decisions, and trust the imported history after the first pass.

TraderSync already stores the trades. This guide helps you verify whether the exported history keeps the fields Vigil needs for behavioral audit, rule checks, and clean historical review.

What TraderSync Import Gives You

Your TraderSync history already has the trades. What it does not have is a second opinion. Vigil runs every imported trade through an AI audit that checks entries, exits, position sizing, and timing against your prop firm rules -- then tells you exactly which trades would have blown your account.

Parsing happens entirely in your browser. Your TraderSync file never touches a server. TraderSync exports are clean (8 columns), so the import is fast and rarely needs manual correction.

Who this import guide is for

Best for traders migrating an existing journal into Vigil so they can audit historical behavior instead of rebuilding a log from scratch.

What to verify after import

Expect core trade fields to transfer more reliably than custom notes, tags, or platform-specific annotations. Review the parsed result before assuming every workflow artifact came across intact.

  • --Export format reflected on this page: CSV (trades or executions)
  • --8 common columns mapped from TraderSync
  • --3 documented quirks for this format
  • --5 concrete export steps listed
How should you evaluate this import?

- Does your TraderSync export preserve the exact fields Vigil needs, starting with Date, Symbol, Side, Entry Price?

- Are Date values consistent enough that you can verify one known trade before saving the import?

- Do the quirks on this page match the file you are holding, or are you relying on a different export mode than the one this guide describes?

What evidence should survive the import?

- Direction, symbol, size, and realized P&L match the original TraderSync file after parsing.

- Date survives in a format you can sanity-check against one real trade from the source platform.

- Partial fills, commissions, swap, or grouped executions are reviewed before you trust the imported totals.

How to Export from TraderSync
  1. Log into TraderSync and go to Trades.
  2. Click the filter icon to set your date range.
  3. Click "Export" in the top-right and choose CSV.
  4. Select whether to export trades or executions.
  5. Upload the CSV to Vigil > Import.

Export format: CSV (trades or executions)

Supported Columns

Vigil automatically detects these TraderSync columns and maps them to a standardized trade format:

DateSymbolSideEntry PriceExit PriceP&LQuantityDuration
What usually breaks in TraderSync exports?
  • --Tags may contain commas which can break naive CSV parsers -- Vigil handles this.
  • --Scaling into positions creates multiple rows per trade.
  • --Two export types: trades (grouped) and executions (individual fills).
  • --Journal exports can preserve summary trades while dropping the context that explains why the trade was taken. Review the parsed rows before assuming your old workflow survived intact.
What should you check before trusting the import?

- Spot-check one winning trade and one losing trade before saving the import.

- Confirm the importer did not flatten a format-specific edge case into a generic row.

- Use this page as the pre-flight checklist before trusting the imported history.

[Screenshot: TraderSync import flow in Vigil]

What Happens After Import

Once your TraderSync trades are imported, Vigil normalizes every execution into a standard format with symbol, direction, entry/exit prices, quantity, and P&L. From there you can:

  • 1. Run an AI audit to identify your biggest leaks and rule violations.
  • 2. See performance breakdowns by instrument, session, and day of week.
  • 3. Track drawdown in real-time against your prop firm rules.
  • 4. Compare win rates, R:R ratios, and consistency across time periods.

Ready to import your TraderSync trades?

Free, private, and takes under 30 seconds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it free to import TraderSync trades to Vigil?

Yes, importing trades from TraderSync to Vigil is completely free. There is no limit on the number of trades you can import, and all parsing happens client-side in your browser so your data never touches our servers.

What file format does TraderSync export?

TraderSync exports trade data as CSV (trades or executions). Vigil automatically detects the TraderSync format based on column headers and maps all fields to a standardized format for analysis.

Does Vigil support all TraderSync trade types?

Vigil supports long and short trades from TraderSync across all asset classes the platform covers. If your export includes partial fills or scaling, Vigil will parse each execution row and pair entries with exits automatically.

Is my TraderSync data safe when importing to Vigil?

Your data is completely private. Vigil parses TraderSync files entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No trade data is uploaded to any server. This makes the import process GDPR-compliant by design.

What should I verify before saving an imported TraderSync file?

Verify that the parsed trades preserve the core evidence from your TraderSync export: symbol, direction, size, timing, and realized P&L. Then spot-check one known winning trade and one known losing trade before you trust the audit output.

Why is this TraderSync import page indexable?

This guide is indexable because the export path, expected fields, and common breakpoints are specific enough to help a trader verify a real import before saving it.

Not sure which firm is right for you?

Answer 5 questions. Get a personalized recommendation based on your trading style, risk tolerance, and budget.

Take the Prop Firm Finder Quiz
VR

Vigil Research

Reviewed current rules dataset | Rules verified against official firm websites