trading journal: how to track, review, and improve your trading with data

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a trading journal is the most underused tool in a trader's workflow. most traders know they should keep one. almost nobody does it consistently. and the ones who do often track the wrong things.

here's why that matters: without a trading journal, you can't separate what's working from what isn't. you can't identify patterns in your own behavior. you don't know which setups make you money and which ones drain your account. you're flying blind — and in futures trading, flying blind with leverage is how accounts blow up.

the good news: a trading journal doesn't have to be complicated. the key is tracking the right data, reviewing it regularly, and combining it with market-level statistics to build a complete picture of your trading performance.

table of contents

  • what is a trading journal and why it matters
  • what to track in your trading journal
  • how to review your trading journal
  • trading journal templates and examples
  • the best trading journal format for you
  • why most trading journals fail
  • trading journal + market data: the complete picture
  • building a trading journal habit that sticks
  • key takeaways

what is a trading journal and why it matters

a trading journal is a record of your trades and the data around them. at its most basic level, it tracks what you traded, when, why, and how it turned out.

but a good trading journal goes deeper. it doesn't just record what happened — it captures the conditions, the reasoning, and the outcome so you can find patterns over time.

here's what a trading journal actually does for you:

  • reveals your real numbers. your win rate, average winner, average loser, and profit factor — based on your actual trades, not your memory of them
  • identifies patterns. maybe you lose money every Monday morning. maybe your best trades happen on NQ gap days. maybe you consistently overtrade after a losing streak. a trading journal shows you these patterns because the data is there in black and white
  • creates accountability. when you know you have to log a trade in your trading journal, you think twice about taking impulsive setups. the act of journaling creates a friction that reduces emotional trading
  • tracks improvement. how do you know if you're getting better? your day trading journal shows you the trend line of your performance over weeks and months — not just how today felt

what to track in your trading journal

here's what a useful trading journal captures for every trade:

the basics (required)

  • date and time of entry and exit
  • instrument (ES, NQ, GC, etc.)
  • direction (long or short)
  • entry price and exit price
  • position size (number of contracts)
  • P&L (dollar amount)
  • session (NY, London, Asian, overnight)
  • setup type (ORB breakout, gap fill, IB breakout, etc.)

the context (recommended)

  • day of week — tracks your performance by day
  • gap direction and size at the open — were you trading with or against the gap?
  • IB range (wide or narrow) — context for IB-based setups
  • market condition — trending, ranging, choppy, news-driven
  • emotional state — confident, hesitant, frustrated, revenge trading

the analysis (for review)

  • was this an A+ setup? did it meet all your criteria, or did you bend the rules?
  • did you follow your plan? entry, stop, target — all as planned?
  • what would you do differently? only useful if you're honest

what NOT to track

don't overcomplicate your trading journal. some traders create 30-field spreadsheets that take 10 minutes to fill out per trade. then they stop journaling after a week because it's too much work.

track the essentials. add complexity only when you have enough data to make additional fields worth the effort.

how to review your trading journal

tracking trades is step one. reviewing them is where the real value comes from. here's how to review your day trading journal effectively:

weekly review (15-20 minutes)

every weekend, review your trading journal for the week:

  1. total P&L — net result for the week
  2. win rate by setup type — which setups made money? which lost money?
  3. win rate by day of week — are certain days consistently better or worse?
  4. win rate by session — are you more profitable during NY vs. other sessions?
  5. plan adherence — how many trades followed your plan vs. how many were impulsive?
  6. emotional patterns — did any emotional states correlate with losing trades?

monthly review (30-45 minutes)

once a month, zoom out:

  1. rolling win rate trend — is it improving, declining, or flat?
  2. average winner vs. average loser — is your reward-to-risk improving?
  3. profit factor by setup type — which strategies are actually making money over a larger sample?
  4. biggest winners and biggest losers — what conditions produced your extremes?
  5. pattern identification — what's the #1 thing you should change next month?

the weekly review keeps you on track. the monthly review reveals the trends that daily trading obscures.

for a framework on building a data-driven review process, see our guide on how to build confidence in trading.

trading journal templates and examples

spreadsheet trading journal template

the simplest trading journal is a spreadsheet (Excel, Google Sheets). here's a basic trading journal template structure:

dedicated trading journal software

if you want more than a spreadsheet, there are dedicated best trading journal platforms:

  • Tradervue — imports trades from most brokers, automatic P&L tracking, tag-based filtering
  • TradesViz — free tier available, detailed analytics and charts
  • Edgewonk — popular with futures traders, includes emotional tracking

the advantage of dedicated software is automated import and better analytics. the disadvantage is cost and complexity. for most traders, a spreadsheet works fine — especially when you're starting out.

the best trading journal format for you

the best trading journal is the one you'll actually use. here's how to choose:

  • if you want simplicity: Google Sheets or Excel spreadsheet. quick, free, customizable
  • if you want automation: dedicated software like Tradervue that imports trades directly from your broker
  • if you want detailed analysis: combine a basic journal with a data platform like edgeful that gives you market-level statistics alongside your personal trades
  • if you want something physical: some traders prefer pen-and-paper journals for the end-of-day review. the friction of writing by hand can improve reflection

the format matters less than the habit. a basic spreadsheet that you fill out every day beats an advanced platform that you use for a week and then forget about.

why most trading journals fail

too complicated

30 fields per trade, color coding, conditional formatting, pivot tables. it looks impressive for the first 3 days. then you stop because it takes too long.

keep your trading journal simple. 8-10 fields max. 30-60 seconds per trade. you can always add complexity later if you need it.

no review process

tracking trades without reviewing them is like collecting data you never look at. the value of a day trading journal comes from the review — identifying patterns, spotting weaknesses, and making adjustments. if you're not reviewing weekly, you're just keeping a record for no one.

only tracking winners

some traders journal their good trades and "forget" to log the losers. this defeats the entire purpose. your losing trades are where the most valuable information lives. log everything.

stopping after a losing streak

the irony: the times you most need your trading journal are the times you're most likely to stop using it. a losing streak is exactly when you should be reviewing your journal to understand what's going wrong — not abandoning it because it feels bad.

trading journal + market data: the complete picture

here's where the trading journal gets powerful: combining your personal trading data with market-level statistics.

your trading journal tells you what YOU did. a data platform tells you what the MARKET did. together, they answer questions your journal can't answer alone:

  • was the setup actually high-percentage today? your journal shows you took a gap fill trade. edgeful data shows the gap fill rate for that specific ticker + direction + day of week was [PLACEHOLDER STATS — greg to provide]. now you know whether the setup had an edge — not just whether your trade worked
  • are you trading the right conditions? your journal shows you trade every day. according to edgeful data, your primary setup performs [PLACEHOLDER STATS — greg to provide] better on Tuesday-Thursday than Monday or Friday. your journal + market data reveals that you're leaving edge on the table by trading the wrong days
  • is the setup deteriorating? your trading journal shows declining performance over the last month. edgeful data shows the setup's win rate has also declined — meaning the market conditions changed, not your execution. without market data, you'd blame yourself for something that wasn't your fault

this combination — personal data + market data — is what turns a trading journal from a record-keeping exercise into a real performance improvement tool.

for a platform that provides this kind of market-level data, edgeful's what's in play screener shows you which setups have the strongest historical data for today's specific conditions.

note: results require customization, time, and effort. the data from both your journal and market statistics gives you a foundation — but you have to put in the work to review, adapt, and stay consistent.

building a trading journal habit that sticks

make it part of your session

don't journal at the end of the day when you're tired. log each trade immediately after it closes while the details are fresh. 30 seconds per trade.

review on the same day each week

pick a day — Sunday evening or Saturday morning — and review your trading journal every single week. put it on your calendar. treat it like a trading session.

start with the minimum

8-10 fields. 30 seconds per trade. weekly review. that's it. you can always add more later, but you can't recover the habit once you quit because it was too complicated.

focus on one thing per month

after your monthly review, pick ONE thing to improve next month. not five. one. maybe it's "stop trading on Fridays" because the data shows your Friday win rate is terrible. maybe it's "only take A+ setups" because your journal shows half your losses come from B and C setups.

one change per month, tracked in your trading journal, is how real improvement happens. for more on building a disciplined trading approach, see our guide on the trading mindset that separates consistent traders.

key takeaways

  • a trading journal is the foundation of trading improvement — without one, you can't separate what's working from what isn't
  • track the essentials in your trading journal: date, instrument, direction, entry/exit, P&L, session, setup type, and whether you followed your plan
  • the weekly review is where the real value comes from — identify patterns in your win rate by setup, day of week, and session
  • the best trading journal is the one you'll actually use — a simple spreadsheet beats a complex platform you abandon after a week
  • combining your trading journal with market-level data (like edgeful's reports) creates the complete picture: what you did + whether the conditions supported it
  • according to edgeful data, the same setup performs differently depending on conditions — your day trading journal should help you identify which conditions produce your best results
  • start simple, review weekly, and focus on one improvement per month. consistency with your trading journal matters more than complexity

trading involves risk. past performance and historical data do not guarantee future results. always trade with proper risk management.

frequently asked questions

this information is not trading advice and should be used for educational purposes only. futures, options, and forex are leveraged instruments, and carry a high degree of risk. past results are not indicative of future returns. your use of the trading observations is entirely at your own risk and it is your sole responsibility to evaluate the accuracy, completeness, and usefulness of the information.

futures and forex trading contains substantial risk and is not for every investor. an investor could potentially lose all or more than the initial investment. risk capital is money that can be lost without jeopardising ones' financial security or life style. only risk capital should be used for trading and only those with sufficient risk capital should consider trading. past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.

testimonials appearing on this website may not be representative of other clients or customers and is not a guarantee of future performance or success.