How to Export Trade History from MetaTrader 4 for Analysis

Your trade history holds more value than you might think. Beyond wins and losses, it reveals patterns, strengths, and costly habits. If you’re serious about improving your performance, exporting your trading data is essential and MetaTrader 4 gives you everything you need to make that happen.

Why exporting your history matters

Looking at a single trade in isolation doesn’t tell you much. But analyzing months of performance across instruments, timeframes, and trade types? That’s where the real insights begin. Exporting trade history allows you to run numbers, spot trends, and backtrack decisions, something every disciplined trader should be doing.

Whether you’re building a journal in Excel, working with Myfxbook, or reviewing data manually, having the raw numbers at your fingertips makes it easier to improve with purpose.

Trading

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How to access your trade history

Inside MetaTrader 4, go to the “Terminal” window at the bottom of your screen and select the “Account History” tab. By default, this shows recent trades, but you can right-click anywhere inside the panel to select your desired timeframe: last week, last month, or custom period.

For full flexibility, choose “Custom Period” and select the range you want to analyze. Once the data loads, you’ll see a list of closed trades, including ticket numbers, open/close times, trade size, profit/loss, and swap/commission details.

Exporting to a file in just a few clicks

After the trade list is populated, right-click again in the “Account History” tab and select “Save as Report” or “Save as Detailed Report.” This creates an HTML file that includes all the data, along with a basic summary at the bottom showing total trades, average profit/loss, drawdown, and other key metrics.

To work with the data in Excel or Google Sheets, open the HTML file and copy-paste the table directly into your spreadsheet. You can then sort, filter, and build charts to track things like win rate per pair, average holding time, or best/worst entry times.

Using trade history to improve performance

With your data in spreadsheet form, patterns begin to emerge. Maybe you’re more profitable on certain days of the week, or perhaps your trades after major news events consistently underperform. You may discover that small losses eat into your wins, or that larger positions don’t always mean better results.

This kind of granular review helps shape future decisions and it starts with exporting your data from MetaTrader 4 on a regular basis.

Syncing with third-party analytics tools

If spreadsheets aren’t your thing, platforms like Myfxbook or FX Blue allow you to link your MetaTrader 4 account and import your trade history automatically. These services provide advanced visuals, performance breakdowns, and strategy testing without the need to build custom spreadsheets.

For traders who want quick insights without the manual work, these integrations are worth exploring.

Exporting your trade history isn’t just about record-keeping, it’s about building a smarter approach to the markets. MetaTrader 4 makes the process easy, whether you’re saving a simple report or diving deep into Excel-based analysis. Make this a weekly habit, and over time, your data will start doing what it’s meant to do and teach you how to trade better.

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Nancy

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Nancy is Tech blogger. She contributes to the Blogging, Gadgets, Social Media and Tech News section on TechPont.

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