Let’s be real. You want a Pine Script trading bot or indicator that actually works. But coding it yourself?
Who has the time?
Enter Fiverr and Upwork — the digital bazaars where developers await, fingers poised, ready to whip up your dream script for a fee.
But how much do you actually have to pay to get a reliable, functioning Pine Script build?
And what hidden costs should you watch out for before you click “Hire”?
Spoiler alert: It’s not just about the sticker price.
π§ What You’re Really Paying For (And What You’re Not)
When you hire someone on Fiverr or Upwork for Pine Script, you’re buying more than just lines of code:
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Skill & experience: Pine Script is niche. Not all coders get its quirks or TradingView’s quirks.
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Communication: Can they understand your strategy clearly? Or will you spend hours clarifying?
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Support & revisions: Will they fix bugs or tweak your script post-delivery?
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Compliance: Does your script follow TradingView’s latest Pine Script version and policies?
Cheap can turn expensive when you get a buggy script that doesn’t backtest or throws errors.
πΈ Fiverr vs. Upwork: What’s the Damage to Your Wallet?
Fiverr
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Entry-level Pine Script gigs: $30–$100
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Mid-tier, experienced developers: $100–$300
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Top-tier with proven track records: $300+ (sometimes bundled with training or ongoing support)
Why Fiverr?
Fiverr is great for small, straightforward scripts — think alerts or simple indicators.
But beware: Many Fiverr gigs promise the moon but deliver a moon crater. Check reviews carefully, look for completed jobs with screenshots or videos.
Upwork
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Junior Pine Script freelancers: $20–$50/hr
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Experienced Pine Script devs: $50–$100+/hr
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Top consultants: $100–$150+/hr (usually for complex strategies or integrations)
Why Upwork?
Upwork is better if you want ongoing communication, longer-term projects, or custom automation connecting TradingView with brokers via APIs or webhooks.
Heads up: Many Upwork freelancers charge for “discovery” or “clarification” hours — expect to pay upfront for scope discussions.
⚠️ Hidden Costs You Didn’t Think About
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Revision loops: Your idea probably isn’t perfect on the first go. Be ready to pay for tweaks.
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Debugging after TradingView updates: TradingView rolls out changes; your bot might break without updates.
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Testing on live data: Backtesting is one thing; live testing and fixing unexpected behavior can add time and cost.
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Documentation & handoff: Do you get clear instructions or just a “here’s the code” dump?
π‘ Insider Tips to Save Money & Get What You Really Need
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Be crystal clear about your strategy: Vague descriptions = more revisions.
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Request sample scripts or portfolios: Don’t hire blind.
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Ask for compatibility with Pine Script v5: Future-proof your investment.
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Set milestone payments: Pay after specific deliverables, not all upfront.
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Keep communication documented: Avoid scope creep.
π€ So… Is It Worth It?
If your time is worth $50/hour or more, outsourcing makes sense. It lets you focus on trading or strategy refinement instead of wrestling with code.
But if you expect a “set it and forget it” magic bullet for $20, you’re setting yourself up for frustration.
The sweet spot? Budget around $150–$300 for a solid, mid-complexity Pine Script with decent support.
π Final Thoughts
Outsourcing Pine Script coding can be a game changer — if you know what you’re paying for and avoid common pitfalls.
Don’t let sticker shock or lowball prices derail your trading edge.
Want a checklist for hiring Pine Script devs on Fiverr or Upwork? Or a list of trusted developers I personally vetted? Hit me up in the comments.

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