Victor Wagner

Github Tradingview Premium Indicator Free

You have the URL of a GitHub repository. Now, how do you get the script into TradingView?

Step 1: Find the .pine or .txt file. On the GitHub page, navigate to the file list. You are looking for a file ending in .pine, .txt, or just the raw script code. Click on it.

Step 2: Get the Raw Code. Click the Raw button at the top right of the code window. Your browser will now display only the code, no GitHub formatting. Press CTRL+A (Select All) and CTRL+C (Copy).

Step 3: Open TradingView Pine Editor. Log into TradingView (free account works). Open a chart. At the bottom, click the Pine Editor tab.

Step 4: Create a New Indicator. Click Open -> New blank indicator. Delete every line of default code (the template). Now, paste the code you copied from GitHub using CTRL+V.

Step 5: Compile and Save. Click the Save icon (floppy disk). Name it something like "Free Premium Clone." github tradingview premium indicator free

Step 6: Add to Chart. Click the Add to Chart button.

Congratulations. You just installed a "premium" indicator for free.


Go to GitHub.com and search for:

"Pine Script" "indicator" NOT invite-only

TradingView is aggressively fighting the type of sharing facilitated by GitHub. In 2024 and 2025, they introduced Pine Script obfuscation tools for premium vendors, making it impossible to decompile paid scripts into readable code.

Furthermore, TradingView legal has issued DMCA takedowns to GitHub for repositories hosting exact copies of marketplace scripts. You have the URL of a GitHub repository

What does this mean for you? The era of finding a direct copy of "LuxAlgo Pro" is ending. However, the era of functional clones is thriving.

Developers are moving toward "Open Source Core Logic." They release the mathematical engine (the hard part) for free, but sell the "UI wrapper" (colors, alerts, dashboard) for money. As a user, you can copy the free GitHub math and build your own basic dashboard.


For active traders, TradingView is the industry standard for charting. However, the gap between the free plan and the premium experience is often bridged by third-party indicators—tools like "LuxAlgo," "Machine Learning: Lorentzian Classification," or proprietary institutional toolkits.

Officially, high-end indicators can cost anywhere from $30 to $100 per month. Unofficially, a thriving community on GitHub seeks to democratize these tools, offering "cracked," "open-sourced," or "clone" versions of premium indicators for free.

But is the code on GitHub a goldmine for traders, or a security risk waiting to happen? Step 6: Add to Chart

Let’s be realistic for a moment.

Pro Tip: Always check the LICENSE file in the GitHub repository. If you see GPL-3.0 or MIT, you are in the clear. If you see leaked files from a known vendor, proceed with extreme caution.


If you want, I can:

I understand the appeal of finding a “free premium” TradingView indicator on GitHub. However, I want to give you an honest, in-depth review of what you’re actually getting, the risks involved, and whether it’s worth your time—before you start copying random Pine Script code into your charts.


Do not trust GitHub “free premium TradingView indicators” for real trading.

Do use GitHub to:

If a strategy truly requires a premium indicator, either:


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github tradingview premium indicator free