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Signal copier hub · 4 sources × 6 platforms

One signal copier for MT4, MT5, cTrader — and every route after them

A signal copier is software that automatically turns trading signals into live orders on your brokerage account. PipSync is a cloud-based signal copier that routes signals from Telegram, Discord, TradingView alerts and custom webhooks to MT4, MT5, cTrader, Match-Trader, Binance Futures and Bybit — with server-side risk rules and no VPS.

Start free — no credit cardSee pricing

Risk warning: CFDs are complex instruments with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70–80% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. Risk disclosure · Past performance.

This page is the hub for everything PipSync executes: every signal source, every destination platform, and how a signal travels from a chat message to a confirmed order. PipSync is in public beta, so the claims here match what is live today — platforms still in beta or on the roadmap are labelled exactly that.

PipSync signal copier at a glance

Signal sources (live)Telegram, Discord, TradingView webhook alerts, custom JSON webhooks
Destinations (live)MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, Match-Trader, Binance Futures, Bybit
Destinations in beta / plannedDXtrade and TradeLocker in beta; Interactive Brokers (Q3 2026), OANDA and IG Markets (Q4 2026) on the roadmap
Prop-firm accountsFTMO, The5%ers and FundedNext — reached through their MT4/MT5 backends
Risk managementServer-side: fixed or percent-risk sizing, SL/TP mapping, max open trades, symbol filters
InfrastructureFully cloud-based — no VPS, no EA, no terminal plugin to install
PriceFree plan (€0, no credit card to start); paid plans from €49/month

What is a signal copier?

A signal copier is software that converts trading signals — messages or alerts describing a trade — into real orders on a brokerage account. It watches a source such as a Telegram channel, a Discord server or a TradingView alert, extracts the instrument, direction, entry and exit levels from each signal, applies the user's own risk rules, and submits the resulting order to a trading platform such as MT4, MT5 or cTrader.

A signal copier is not a signal provider and not copy trading in the social-trading sense. It does not decide what to trade; it executes decisions published by sources the user has deliberately chosen and is entitled to access. PipSync sits squarely in this category: it is execution infrastructure, currently in public beta, and it never generates or sells trade ideas itself.

Which sources and platforms does PipSync connect?

PipSync connects four live signal sources to six live destination platforms, and any source can be routed to any destination — that is a matrix of 24 possible routes, configured per route in one dashboard. Sources and destinations are independent, so adding a second channel or a second broker account never means starting over.

Each destination uses its platform-native integration rather than a one-size-fits-all bridge: cTrader connects through Spotware's official Open API, MetaTrader 4 and 5 through dedicated bridge integrations, and Match-Trader, Binance Futures and Bybit through their REST and WebSocket APIs. Beyond the six live platforms, DXtrade and TradeLocker are available in beta, and Interactive Brokers (Q3 2026), OANDA and IG Markets (both Q4 2026) are on the public roadmap.

  • Sources: Telegram channels and groups, Discord servers, TradingView alert webhooks, custom JSON webhooks from your own scripts or tools
  • MetaTrader 5 — FX, CFDs, stocks and crypto CFDs; hedging and netting accounts
  • MetaTrader 4 — legacy FX and CFD accounts that many brokers and signal providers still run on
  • cTrader — ECN/STP brokers via Spotware's official Open API
  • Match-Trader — the platform many newer prop firms run on
  • Binance Futures — USD-M and COIN-M perpetuals, with post-only and reduce-only support
  • Bybit — crypto derivatives with unified margin

How does PipSync execute a signal end-to-end?

Every signal passes through the same six-stage pipeline regardless of where it came from or where it is going: parse, validate, route, submit, confirm, mirror. The pipeline runs entirely on PipSync's servers, so nothing depends on your computer or a rented VPS being online.

Parsing is AI-based: the raw message or alert is read for symbol, direction, entry, stop-loss, take-profit and any management instructions, whether the signal is free text, a structured template or a screenshot. Validation then applies your server-side risk rules — position sizing, maximum open trades, symbol filters — and a signal that cannot be interpreted unambiguously is not traded.

Routing decides which of your connected accounts receive the order and maps the signal's symbol to each broker's naming. Submission goes out through the platform-native integration described above, confirmation records exactly what was filled, and mirroring keeps the position in sync afterwards — stop moves, break-even instructions and partial closes from the same source are applied to the open trade. The dashboard shows each stage, so you can always see how a message was interpreted and what was sent.

How do I choose a signal copier?

Choose a signal copier by checking how well it covers your sources and platforms today, where its risk rules actually run, and how honestly it reports what it did — not by the boldest marketing claim. A copier that only supports your current broker quietly locks you in; one that hides its parsing behind a black box leaves you guessing when a trade looks wrong.

These are the criteria that separate copiers in practice:

  • Source coverage — does it read all the places your signals actually arrive (Telegram, Discord, TradingView, your own webhooks), or just one?
  • Destination coverage — can it execute on the platform your account really uses, including cTrader, Match-Trader or a crypto exchange, not only MetaTrader?
  • Parsing approach — rigid templates break the moment a provider changes format; AI parsing reads free text, multiple languages and screenshots
  • Where risk rules run — server-side rules apply before any order leaves the platform; terminal-side EA rules die with the terminal
  • Infrastructure — does it require a Windows VPS running 24/7, or is it fully hosted?
  • Transparency — can you inspect, per signal, what was parsed, what was validated and what was submitted?
  • Multi-account fan-out — can one signal reach several accounts or platforms at once?
  • Total cost — include VPS rent and per-account fees, not just the headline subscription
  • Honesty about status — a vendor that labels beta features as beta is telling you the truth elsewhere too

Why is multi-source, multi-destination support so rare?

Because most signal copiers were built as MetaTrader Expert Advisors, and an EA is by construction tied to one platform and one machine. The EA runs inside an MT4 or MT5 terminal, which means the copier inherits MetaTrader's architecture: one terminal per account, a Windows machine (usually a paid VPS) that must stay on, and no path at all to cTrader, Match-Trader or a crypto exchange — those platforms simply do not run MQL code.

Supporting a second platform under that model means writing an entirely new execution layer, which is why most vendors never do it. PipSync avoids the problem by decoupling the two halves: signal ingestion and parsing happen once in the cloud, and each destination gets its own native connector behind a shared pipeline. New sources and new platforms can be added independently — which is also why DXtrade and TradeLocker could enter beta without touching the parsing layer, and why Telegram, Discord, TradingView and webhook signals all behave identically once parsed.

Try it on the free plan

Connect a signal source and a broker account, watch PipSync parse and route in real time, and upgrade only if you need more. No credit card required to start.

Start free — no credit cardSee pricing

Risk warning: CFDs are complex instruments with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 70–80% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. Risk disclosure · Past performance.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Which trading platforms does PipSync support as a signal copier?

Six platforms are live: MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, Match-Trader, Binance Futures and Bybit. DXtrade and TradeLocker are available in beta, and Interactive Brokers, OANDA and IG Markets are on the 2026 roadmap. Any of the four signal sources — Telegram, Discord, TradingView alerts and custom webhooks — can be routed to any live platform.

Written by the PipSync team · Reviewed by Tobias Russmann, Director, PipSync · Published · Last updated

PipSync is a cloud-based signal automation platform that routes trading signals from Telegram, Discord, TradingView alerts and custom webhooks to broker accounts on MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, Match-Trader, Binance Futures and Bybit — with server-side risk management and no VPS required. PipSync is an execution tool, not a signal provider and not investment advice.

PipSync is a signal execution tool. It does not provide trading signals, does not guarantee any trading results and is not investment advice. Trading leveraged products involves substantial risk of loss. See the full risk disclosure and performance disclaimer.