Eighteen months on TIKR Terminal — the fundamental research platform that costs less than a Netflix subscription and covers more stocks than I'll ever analyze.
I started using TIKR Terminal in November 2024, during a period when I was analyzing roughly 15-20 stocks per week and getting increasingly frustrated with the fragmented workflow of downloading annual reports, scraping Yahoo Finance, and building my own DCF spreadsheets. The promise of TIKR was aggressive: Bloomberg-quality fundamental data for $15 per month. Eighteen months and approximately 800 stock analyses later, I can tell you exactly where that promise holds and where it crumbles. This is not investment advice. I'm describing my personal experience as a software engineer who approaches stock research like any other data problem.
What TIKR Gets Right: Global Coverage at a Fraction of the Cost
The headline number is 65,000 stocks across 90+ exchanges. For context, Yahoo Finance covers roughly 45,000 US-listed securities, and Koyfin's free tier gives you data on maybe 3,000. TIKR includes everything from Apple (market cap: $3.1 trillion as of my last check) to a $6 million Indonesian palm oil company listed on the Jakarta Stock Exchange. When I started researching emerging-market small-caps as part of a factor rotation strategy in March 2025, TIKR was the only affordable platform that had balance sheet data for Vietnamese and Philippine stocks going back five years.
The financial statement presentation is what originally sold me. TIKR normalizes company filings into a standardized format — income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement — across all reporting standards (US GAAP, IFRS, Indian GAAP, etc.). This means you can compare a German auto parts manufacturer reporting under IFRS to a Japanese competitor reporting under JGAAP without manually reconciling line items. I tested this by pulling 10 years of data for Toyota and Volkswagen and comparing free cash flow calculations. TIKR's normalized FCF numbers differed from my manual calculation by an average of 2.3%, mostly due to how they treated capitalized leases before IFRS 16 adoption.
The screener is genuinely useful for quantitative filtering. I built a screen for companies with revenue growth above 10%, return on invested capital above 15%, and debt-to-equity below 0.5 across all global exchanges. TIKR returned 1,847 results in about 3 seconds. Of those, I manually verified 50 random picks against their latest annual reports — 47 checked out within reasonable tolerance, 2 had data that was two quarters stale, and 1 had a completely wrong ROIC because TIKR hadn't adjusted for a major acquisition that closed six weeks prior.
The valuation dashboard gets a lot right. TIKR calculates enterprise value, EV/EBITDA, P/E, price-to-book, dividend yield, and free cash flow yield automatically, and plots them on historical percentile charts that show you whether a stock is cheap or expensive relative to its own 5-year range. For a developer who thinks in percentiles, this is a faster way to spot anomalies than scanning a spreadsheet.
TIKR vs. Koyfin: The Comparison That Matters
Koyfin is TIKR's most direct competitor, and I used both platforms simultaneously for the first six months of my subscription to compare them head-to-head. Koyfin costs $350-500 per year depending on the plan, versus TIKR's $180 per year. That's roughly a 60% price difference.
For financial statement depth, TIKR wins. It provides up to 15 years of historical data with quarterly granularity, while Koyfin's free tier stops at 5 years. TIKR's segment breakdown — showing revenue and profit by business unit — is more detailed for international companies. Koyfin's advantage is in visualization: its charting engine is faster, more customizable, and produces graphs that look professional enough for a client presentation. TIKR's charts look like they were designed by a database engineer (which, to be fair, they probably were).
For screening, the two platforms are roughly equivalent in capability but different in philosophy. TIKR's screener emphasizes financial statement metrics. Koyfin's screener emphasizes market data and technical indicators. If you're screening for fundamentally cheap companies with strong balance sheets, TIKR is better. If you're screening for stocks making new 52-week highs on above-average volume, Koyfin is better.
Where Koyfin clearly wins is in supplementary data. Koyfin has ETF holdings data, insider trading filings, economic indicators, and a news feed that aggregates from multiple sources. TIKR has essentially none of this. It's a fundamental data platform, not an all-in-one research terminal. I kept both subscriptions for about 4 months before deciding that TIKR's fundamental depth was more valuable than Koyfin's breadth for my workflow — but I understand why someone would make the opposite choice.
Where TIKR Falls Short — Sometimes Catastrophically
The biggest problem is data timeliness. TIKR relies on S&P Capital IQ and Refinitiv as data providers, which means they process filings after the primary sources do. In my tracking, TIKR updates financial statements with a median delay of 5 calendar days after a company files its 10-K or 10-Q. For a quarterly earnings model, that's acceptable. For a post-earnings event-driven trade, it's useless — you need the numbers within minutes, and TIKR can't deliver that.
The news integration is basically nonexistent. TIKR added a "News" tab in late 2025 that pulls headlines from a third-party feed, but it doesn't link news events to financial data. You can't see how a company's stock reacted to a specific earnings release, and the headlines aren't tagged by topic or sentiment. Compare this to Koyfin, which maps news events to price charts, and the gap is wide.
I've also encountered data errors that made me question the platform's quality control. In February 2026, I found that TIKR showed Alibaba's revenue as $126 billion for their fiscal year ending March 2025, when the actual filing reported $131 billion — a 3.8% discrepancy. I reported it through their bug form, and it was fixed 11 days later. A 3.8% error on the most-watched Chinese stock in the world, persisting for nearly a year after the filing, does not inspire confidence.
The export functionality is limited. You can export screener results and financial data to CSV, but the API is essentially nonexistent. TIKR has no public REST API — there's no way to pull financial statement data programmatically unless you're willing to scrape the web interface, which violates their terms of service. For a developer who wants to feed TIKR data into a backtesting pipeline or a portfolio dashboard, this is a dealbreaker.
The mobile experience is an afterthought. TIKR has an iOS app that I used for about two weeks before giving up. Chart interactions are sluggish, the screener doesn't render properly on a phone screen, and there's no offline caching — if you're on a plane without Wi-Fi, you have no access to any data, even companies you've viewed before.
Who Should Use TIKR Terminal — and Who Should Skip It
Use TIKR if you are an individual investor or developer who does fundamental stock research and wants a Bloomberg-lite experience at 0.06% of the cost. The $15/month Pro plan is the sweet spot — it unlocks 15 years of financials, the full screener, and data export. If you analyze more than 10 stocks per month, TIKR will save you hours of spreadsheet wrestling per week. If you invest in international markets, TIKR's global coverage is unmatched at this price point. If you're a value investor who cares about balance sheets and cash flows more than price momentum, TIKR's data model maps perfectly to your workflow.
Skip TIKR if you need real-time data or API access. The platform is designed for human-driven fundamental analysis, not algorithmic integration. Skip it if you trade on earnings events — the 5-day filing delay means the market has already moved by the time TIKR updates. Skip it if you rely on qualitative research like conference call transcripts, management track records, or industry reports — TIKR provides the numbers, not the narrative. Skip it if you need a polished, client-ready presentation tool — Koyfin or simply Excel with a Bloomberg data feed will produce better-looking output.
For the developer-to-investor persona — someone who thinks in queries and models rather than stories — TIKR is the best fundamental data platform I've found below $500 per year. But it's a research tool, not a trading platform. Treat it accordingly.
The Bottom Line
After 18 months and roughly 800 stock analyses, TIKR Terminal has earned its $15 per month many times over in my workflow. The global coverage is the killer feature — I can analyze a Korean semiconductor company with the same standardized financial statements as a US tech giant, and that simply wasn't possible at this price point before TIKR existed. The screener saves me 3-4 hours per week of manual filtering. But the data timeliness lag, the missing API, and the occasional quality-control failures mean I still maintain a separate verification step using official filings for any company I'm serious about. TIKR tells you where to look. The SEC's EDGAR database tells you what's actually there. For $15 a month, that's a fair division of labor.
Originally published at pickuma.com. Subscribe to the RSS or follow @pickuma.bsky.social for new reviews.
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