Ghostfolio vs Wealthfront
Ghostfolio is a European alternative to Wealthfront — same payments & finance use case, built under EU data-protection law.
By the EU Alternatives team Last updated
Open-source portfolio tracker for stocks, ETFs, and crypto, self-hosted or Swiss-managed
- Jurisdiction
- EU / EEA
- GDPR by default
- Yes
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- No
- Open source
- No
- Free tier
- No
A curated collection of the best European alternatives to Wealthfront.
- Jurisdiction
- US
- GDPR by default
- Requires DPA + TIA
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- Yes
About Ghostfolio
What Ghostfolio does
Ghostfolio is an open-source wealth management application built in Switzerland that helps individuals track and analyze investment portfolios across multiple brokers and asset classes. It handles stocks, ETFs, bonds, and cryptocurrencies in a single view, providing performance attribution, risk metrics, and allocation breakdowns that would otherwise require a maintained spreadsheet.
Deployment and tech
The application is built with Angular, NestJS, and TypeScript in an Nx monorepo, and ships in two forms: a managed cloud service at Ghostfol.io for hassle-free hosting, or a self-hosted Docker deployment for full control. Features include multi-account transaction management, import/export (CSV and broker-specific formats), portfolio performance calculations, risk analysis, dark mode, and PWA support for mobile. The project is licensed under AGPLv3 with an active contributor community on GitHub.
Positioning
Against Personal Capital, Sharesight, or Monarch Money, Ghostfolio's differentiators are open-source transparency (you can audit what the app does with your financial data), self-hosting for privacy-sensitive users, and Swiss origin rather than US. It's especially popular with European investors who track a mix of local ETFs, international stocks, and crypto — a combination that most US-centric portfolio trackers handle poorly.
Why choose Ghostfolio over Wealthfront?
The decisive argument is data jurisdiction. Wealthfront is headquartered in US, which means personal data processed through it can be subject to non-EU legal regimes — the US CLOUD Act, FISA 702, or similar laws depending on the provider. After the 2020 Schrems II ruling, EU organisations must carry out a transfer impact assessment for every such data flow.
Ghostfolio removes that overhead. As a Switzerland-based provider, it operates natively under GDPR, and data stays inside the EU/EEA by default. For regulated sectors — health, public administration, finance — that's not a nice-to-have but a requirement. For everyone else, it's concentration-risk insurance: you avoid depending on a single non-EU jurisdiction that can change the rules without warning.