Revolut has brought investing to millions of people across Europe and beyond - stocks, crypto, ETFs, all accessible from the same app you use to send money. For casual investors, that convenience is the whole point. But a growing number of Revolut users are trading more actively, and they're running into the same ceiling: the app tells you your portfolio value, not what you're actually doing right or wrong as a trader.
If you've started thinking about which stocks you trade well, which crypto positions are eating into your returns, or whether your entry timing is consistent - the Revolut app won't help you answer those questions. TraderInsight.pro will.
Import your Revolut history and get access to performance reports, a P&L calendar, AI-powered analysis of your trading patterns, and a proper journal to document your decisions. It works across stocks, crypto, and dividends - everything Revolut supports in one place.
The Missing Layer Between Revolut and Real Trading Discipline
Revolut's interface is clean and frictionless by design. That's a feature for getting started - but it becomes a limitation as your trading gets more deliberate. There's no way to categorize a trade by strategy, no report showing which assets consistently lose you money, and no place to write down why you made a decision so you can review it later.
Serious traders - even those with modest account sizes - use structured journaling and data review to close the gap between what they think they're doing and what they're actually doing. That's what a dedicated trading journal provides, and it's why TraderInsight.pro was built.
How to Export Your Trade History from Revolut
Revolut's export is handled through the mobile app only - there's no download option on the web version.
Step 1: Open the app and go to Invest
Log into Revolut on iOS or Android. Tap the Invest tab (or Stocks section) from the main navigation.
Step 2: Find Statements
Tap the three dots (···) or More button in the top-right corner of the Invest section. Select Statements, then Account Statement.
If you don't see it immediately, try: Menu → Documents → Stocks → Account Statement.
Step 3: Choose format and date range
Select Excel as your export format. Set a start and end date that covers the history you want to import. Tap Get Statement.
The file will either download directly to your phone or arrive in your email, depending on your app version.
For crypto trade history, repeat these steps from within the Crypto section of the Revolut app - it generates a separate statement.
Importing into TraderInsight.pro
- Navigate to the Import page.
- Select Revolut from the broker list.
- Drag and drop your exported file.
If you've exported both a stocks statement and a crypto statement, import each one separately - the platform will merge them into a single unified history.
Making Sense of Your History
Once your data is in, a few practical moves:
- Use the Calendar view to get an instant visual on which days and weeks were profitable. Patterns in your timing often emerge quickly.
- Start tagging your trades - even a simple distinction between "planned trade" and "impulse buy" tags will produce useful data within a few weeks.
- If you want to share your portfolio journey publicly or with friends, the sharing features let you publish verified performance without exposing private account details.
- For anyone who's also tracking dividend income alongside trades, everything rolls up into a unified view - no separate tracking needed.
Something Not Working?
If your Revolut statement isn't parsing correctly, drop the team a message. The format varies slightly between account types and regions, and those edge cases get resolved quickly.




