Axiont vs TradeZella — pick by what you need, not by brand.
The short version
TradeZella is a general-purpose trading journal with polished analytics, a replay mode, custom reports, and broad broker coverage. If you want the best post-trade review experience across futures, equities, options, and forex, it holds up.
Axiontis a prop-firm-focused journal with the same core logging, plus a discipline engine — loss caps, cool-downs, third-trade veto, in-plan rate — wired into the UI. If the job you need done is "stop blowing funded accounts," that's what it was built for.
Head-to-head
Core journaling
Both tools log trades with entry/exit, R, P&L, screenshots, tags, and notes. TradeZella has a wider set of pre-built analytics out of the box. Axiont's analytics are more opinionated — fewer dials, more focus on the metrics that move the needle for discipline-limited traders.
Broker + platform coverage
TradeZella supports a broad list of brokers and platforms (including MT4, MT5, NT, TradeStation, Interactive Brokers, and more) via CSV and native importers.
Axiont ships an MT5 Expert Advisor that syncs in real time. MT5 is the only platform at launch; cTrader and CSV import are planned for v2. Narrower, but the MT5 integration is deeper: commission is auto-detected from your deal history, broker time zone is normalized, and the EA forwards every fill without any manual step.
Discipline enforcement
This is the wedge. TradeZella shows you what went wrong after the session. Axiont tries to prevent the wrong trade during the session. Hard loss caps that lock the platform, cool-down timers between losses, a third-trade veto checklist that you can't click past, a mandatory day off after oversized losses, a "you should not be trading" banner that replaces the header. None of this is a nudge — it's the UI refusing to save the next trade.
In-plan rate
TradeZella lets you tag trades but doesn't put discipline adherence above P&L on the dashboard. Axiont does — in-plan rate is the first tile you see, and a binary in-plan/off-plan tag is required to save every trade.
Price
Both are subscription-based. TradeZella pricing sits in the $29–$49/mo range depending on plan and billing cadence. Axiont is €9/mo Basic (€7 yearly), €19/mo Pro (€15 yearly) with the discipline engine, and €169/mo Community (€135 yearly) with weekly calls and written reviews from Igor.
Pick TradeZella if…
- You trade multiple asset classes (equities, options, futures) and want one journal across all of them.
- You spend significant time doing post-trade video review and want TradeZella's replay tooling.
- You already have a disciplined process and just want better post-session analytics.
- You need integrations beyond MT5 today.
Pick Axiont if…
- You're a prop firm or funded-account trader on MT5.
- Your problem isn't strategy — it's that the plan works but you stop following it after two losses.
- You want loss caps, cool-downs, and veto checklists enforced in the UI, not as a spreadsheet you can close.
- You want in-plan rate as the primary metric on your dashboard, above P&L.
Honest gaps
Things TradeZella does well that Axiont doesn't try to do at launch: replay mode, broad broker importers beyond MT5, options analytics, community feed. Axiont's scope is narrower on purpose — a journal plus a discipline layer for MT5 traders specifically. If you need the wider feature set, TradeZella is a good pick.