For years, thinkorswim has been the “default” for serious options traders—built by TD Ameritrade (now Schwab), packed with tools, and the benchmark for new platforms.
We put OptiView (https://opti-view.com) and thinkorswim (https://thinkorswim.com) head-to-head for six weeks of live trading. Here’s what we found.
Quick Verdict
OptiView wins for pure analytics and strategy work. If you want deep options analytics, a powerful strategy modeler, and a modern workflow, OptiView is the clear pick. But if you want everything—research, analytics, and execution—in one place and you’re already at Schwab, thinkorswim is still super convenient.
Honestly, a lot of traders end up using both: OptiView for analysis and setup, then their broker (like thinkorswim) for execution.
Feature Comparison
| Feature | OptiView | thinkorswim |
|---|---|---|
| Real-time options data | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Volatility surface visualization | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Limited |
| IV Rank / IV Percentile | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Basic |
| Options flow scanner | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Custom multi-condition screener | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (ThinkScript) |
| Strategy P&L modeler | ✅ Yes (dynamic simulation) | ✅ Yes (static diagrams) |
| Broker integration / execution | ✅ Yes (5 brokers) | ✅ Integrated (Schwab) |
| Web-based | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Limited web version |
| Desktop client | ❌ | ✅ Yes |
| Mobile app | ✅ Good | ⚠️ Limited analytics |
| Historical IV data | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Limited |
| Backtesting | ❌ | ✅ thinkBack |
Data Quality & Real-Time Performance
Both platforms provide real-time options data during market hours. However, the way that data is processed and presented differs significantly.
thinkorswim’s data is fed directly from Schwab’s institutional infrastructure, which means the raw feed quality is excellent. Greeks are calculated and refreshed in the platform’s native engine. The issue is that the Greeks display can lag when the platform is under heavy load, particularly during high-volatility market events — a known limitation that frustrated thinkorswim users have documented for years.
OptiView delivers real-time Greeks when a supported broker account is connected (Tastytrade, Tradier, TradeStation, Schwab, or E*TRADE). Without a connected broker, the default data is 15-minute delayed OPRA via Intrinio. For most analytical workflows, real-time data is straightforward to unlock; for traders who already use one of the five supported brokers, this is seamless.
Advantage: thinkorswim on raw feed depth; roughly even on real-time Greeks reliability once a broker is connected to OptiView.
Analytics Depth
This is where the comparison becomes most significant for serious options traders.
thinkorswim’s analytics are powerful but require significant expertise to access. The platform’s tools for volatility analysis, including the beta-weighted portfolio delta and the PnL curve overlays, are excellent — but they’re buried in the interface and require learning curve investment. The volatility surface view exists but is not prominently featured. IV Rank is available but doesn’t include percentile calculations out of the box.
OptiView’s analytics are purpose-built for options analysis and presented in a far more accessible interface. The volatility surface is a first-class feature, the IV Percentile is calculated correctly (not just IV Rank), and the Greeks visualization is clear enough that you can assess a position’s risk profile at a glance. Beyond just surface accessibility, OptiView actively simplifies the underlying concepts: visual Greeks breakdowns, labeled simulation surfaces, and inline explanations make it possible for traders newer to options to build genuine understanding rather than just following signals. The platform surfaces the information options traders actually need, in the workflow that options traders actually use — whether they’re just starting out or have been trading for years.
Advantage: OptiView on accessibility and completeness of volatility analytics, for traders at every experience level.
Strategy Simulation: A Decisive Differentiator
Neither platform offers a dedicated options flow scanner — if flow monitoring is part of your process, you’ll need a separate tool for both.
Where they diverge sharply is in how they model a strategy’s value over time. thinkorswim’s risk graphs show the familiar static payoff-at-expiration curve. OptiView’s core innovation is a dynamic value simulation that renders a strategy’s net present value continuously across price and time as a surface plotted on a standard price chart (price on Y-axis, time on X-axis). This gives traders an intuitive, real-time view of how a position’s value evolves before expiry — not just what it’s worth at the final bell.
Add to that the Strategy Assistant, which exhaustively scans option combinations for the highest expected return given your price forecast, and the Magic Wand tool that finds combinations maximizing risk-adjusted return on a user-defined price path, and OptiView’s strategy tooling is meaningfully ahead.
Advantage: OptiView for strategy modeling depth.
Screener & Setup Identification
thinkorswim’s ThinkScript-based screener is technically very powerful — if you’re willing to invest significant time learning the scripting language. Pre-built scans are available but limited in options-specific focus. Creating a multi-condition options scan requires writing code.
OptiView’s screener uses a visual, condition-builder interface that requires no coding. You can filter by IV Rank, IV Percentile, specific Greek thresholds, volume anomalies, and price action conditions — and save those scans for daily reuse. For traders who aren’t programmers, this is a major practical advantage.
Advantage: OptiView for options-specific screening without requiring programming knowledge.
User Interface & Workflow
thinkorswim’s desktop interface is dense and information-rich — by design. It was built for professional traders who want every data point accessible simultaneously. The learning curve is steep, and the interface doesn’t adapt gracefully to traders who want a focused workflow rather than a data-overloaded screen. For beginners, thinkorswim can be genuinely overwhelming.
OptiView’s interface is modern and web-native. The information hierarchy is well-designed, loading the most important metrics prominently and making advanced features available without cluttering the default view. OptiView also puts real effort into helping users understand what they’re looking at: strategy simulations are interactive and time-aware, Greeks are displayed in context, and the platform’s design reflects a philosophy that options don’t have to be impenetrable. Beginners consistently find it far easier to get started, and it remains a capable tool as their understanding deepens. Our test traders consistently rated it as significantly faster to use for a standard pre-trade analysis workflow at any experience level.
Advantage: OptiView on UX for options analytics workflow at every skill level; thinkorswim for all-in-one execution at Schwab.
Pricing
thinkorswim is free to Schwab account holders. There is no additional subscription cost. However, Schwab charges options commissions, which offset the cost of the “free” platform for active traders.
OptiView has two tiers:
- Free: 15-min delayed data, single-leg scanner, payoff simulator, Basic Strategy Assistant
- Premium: $20/month (or ~$8/month billed annually) — adds multi-leg scanner, Advanced Strategy Assistant, unlimited strategy comparison tabs, Greeks scenario heatmap, and Magic Wand customization
For traders at a commission-charging broker who want best-in-class strategy modeling, OptiView’s subscription cost is low relative to the analytical value.
Who Should Use Each Platform
Choose OptiView if:
- You’re newer to options and want a platform that makes the underlying concepts genuinely understandable — not just a terminal full of numbers
- You want purpose-built options analytics with a modern, web-based interface
- Dynamic strategy simulation and the Strategy Assistant are important to your process
- You want sophisticated volatility tools without needing to learn a scripting language
- You trade at Tastytrade, Tradier, TradeStation, Schwab, or E*TRADE and want to route orders directly from your analytics platform
Choose thinkorswim if:
- You’re already at Schwab and want integrated execution with analytics
- You’re comfortable with the learning curve and want deep customization
- You primarily use the platform for charting and technical analysis alongside options
- You want backtesting capability (thinkBack)
Best move for serious traders: Use OptiView for analytics and trade ideas, then execute through your broker of choice.
Want the full rankings? See our Best Options Analytics Platforms in 2026 review.