Short Interest Screener
Short Interest & Cost-to-Borrow Screener
Identify potential short squeeze opportunities using advanced market data
📊 What This Data Represents
Our screener analyzes stock borrowing costs and share availability to identify stocks with tight supply conditions that may lead to short squeezes. We combine real-time borrow fee data, share availability metrics, short interest ratios, and market data from major brokers and FINRA reports to give you comprehensive insights into short-selling dynamics.
🔍 Filter Categories
Borrow Fee:
Annual cost to borrow shares for short selling (higher = harder to short)
Fee Change:
Percentage change in borrowing costs over time
Share Availability:
Number of shares available to borrow (lower = tighter supply)
Availability Change:
Percentage change in share availability
Market Cap:
Company size filter to focus on specific market segments
🔬 Advanced Metrics
Short Interest:
Percentage of shares currently sold short
Net Short Ratio:
Trailing net short volume relative to shares outstanding
Dilution:
Stock dilution percentage filters
Note: Advanced metrics require subscription access
🔐 Access Levels
Guest Users
- • Basic fee filters (up to 20%)
- • Availability filters (500K+ shares)
- • Market cap filters
- • 1 week historical data
Signed-In Users
- • Extended fee filters (up to 50%)
- • Lower availability thresholds
- • Fee & availability change filters
- • Extended historical access
Premium Subscribers
- • All filters unlocked
- • Short interest ratios
- • Net short volume data
- • Dilution metrics
- • Full historical access
💡 Usage Tips
- High Squeeze Potential: Look for stocks with rising borrow fees + decreasing availability
- Historical Analysis: Use date navigation to identify patterns and trends
- Filter Combinations: Combine multiple filters to narrow down to the most promising opportunities
- 🔒 Locked Filters: Upgrade your account to access advanced filtering options
- Daily Updates: Data refreshes daily with the latest market information
Apply filters above to start screening for short squeeze opportunities