Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (2024)

What is support and resistance?

Support and resistance levels are horizontal price levels that typically connect price bar highs to other price bar highs or lows to lows, forming horizontal levels on a price chart.

A support or resistance level is formed when a market’s price action reverses and changes direction, leaving behind a peak or trough (swing point) in the market. Support and resistance levels can carve out trading ranges like we see in the chart below and they also can be seen in trending markets as a market retraces and leaves behind swing points.

Price will often respect these support and resistance levels, in other words, they tend to contain price movement, until of course price breaks through them.

In the chart below, we see an example of support and resistance levels containing price within a trading range. A trading range is simply an area of price contained between parallel support and resistance levels like we see below (price oscillates between the support and resistance levels in a trading range).

Note that in the chart below, price eventually broke up and out of the trading range, moving above the resistance level, then when it came back down and tested the old resistance level, it then held price and acted as support…

The other primary way support and resistance levels are created in a market, is from swing points in a trend.

As a market trends, it retraces back on the trend and this retracement leaves a ‘swing point’ in the market, which in an uptrend looks like a peak and a downtrend looks like a trough.

In an uptrend, the old peaks will tend to act as support after price breaks up past them and then retraces back down to test them. In a downtrend, the opposite is true; the old troughs will tend to act as resistance after price breaks down through them and then retraces back up to test them.

Here’s an example of a market testing previous swing points (support) in a downtrend, note that as the market comes back to test the old support, the level then behaves as ‘new’ resistance and will very often hold price. It’s wise to look for an entry point into a trend as it comes back and tests these previous swing points (see pin bar sell signal in chart below), because it’s at these levels that the trend is most likely to resume, creating a low-risk / high-reward potential:

Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (2)

How to trade price action signals from support and resistance levels

Support and resistance levels are a price action trader’s ‘best friend’. When a price action entry signal forms at a key level of support or resistance, it can be a high-probability entry scenario. The key level gives you a ‘barrier’ to place your stop loss beyond and since it has a strong chance of being a turning point in the market, there’s usually a good risk reward ratio formed at key levels of support and resistance in a market.

The price action entry signal, such as a pin bar signal or other, provides us with some ‘confirmation’ that price may indeed move away from the key level of support or resistance.

In the example chart below, we see a key level of resistance and a bearish fakey strategy that formed at it. Since this fakey showed such aggressive reversal and a false-break of the key resistance, there was a high-probability that price would continue lower following the signal…

Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (3)

The next example chart shows us how to trade price action from a support level in an uptrend. Note that once we got a clear pin bar buy signal, actually two pin bar signals in this case, the uptrend was ready to resume and pushed significantly higher from the key support level.

Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (4)

The next chart example show us how sometimes in trending markets a previous swing level will act as a new support or resistance level and provide a good level to focus our attention on for price action entry signals.

In this case, the trend was up and a previous swing high in the uptrend eventually ‘flipped’ into a support level after price broke up above it. We can see that when price came back to retest that level the second time, it formed a nice pin bar entry signal to buy the market and re-enter the uptrend from a confluent level in the market.

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Finally, the last chart we are looking at is an interesting one. Note the swing low that occurred in the down trend on the left side of the chart. You can see how this level stayed relevant months later, even after the trend changed from down to up. It first acted as a resistance level after price broke down through it, but once that resistance was broken, we had an uptrend form and then after that, that same level acted as support, and that’s where we see the fakey pin bar combo signal in the chart below:

Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (6)

Tips on Support and Resistance

  • Don’t get too carried away with trying to draw every little level on your charts. Aim to find the key daily chart levels, like we showed in the examples above, as these are the most important ones.
  • The horizontal lines of support or resistance that you draw won’t always touch the ‘exact’ high or low of the bars it connects. Sometimes, it’s OK if the line connects bars slightly down from the high or up from the low. The important thing to realize is that this is not an exact science, instead it is both a skill and an art that you’ll improve at through training, experience and time.
  • When in doubt about whether to take a particular price action entry signal or not, ask yourself if it’s at a key level of support or resistance. If it’s not at a key level of support or resistance, it might be better to pass on the signal.
  • A price trading strategy, such as a pin bar, fakey, or inside bar strategy has a significantly better chance of working out if it forms from a confluent level of support or resistance in a market.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this support and resistance trading tutorial. For more information on trading price action from support and resistance levels, click here.

Price Action Strategies

    Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy

    What is support and resistance?Support and resistance levels are horizontal price levels that typically connect price bar highs to other price bar highs or low... Continue Reading

    Pin Bar and Inside Bar Combo Trading Strategy

    Pin bar and Inside bar Combo PatternsA pin bar is a price action strategy that shows rejection of price and indicates a potential reversal is imminent. An insi... Continue Reading

    Fakey Trading Strategy (Inside Bar False Break Out)

    The Fakey Pattern (Inside Bar False Break Out)The Fakey pattern can be best be described as a “false-breakout from an inside bar pattern”. The Fakey patter... Continue Reading

    Inside Bar Trading Strategy

    The Inside Bar Pattern (Break Out or Reversal Pattern)An "inside bar" pattern is a two-bar Continue Reading

    False Breakout Trading Strategy

    False Breakout PatternsFalse-breakouts are exactly what they sound like: a breakout that failed to continue beyond a level, resulting in a ‘false’ breakout... Continue Reading

    Pin Bar Trading Strategy

    The Pin Bar Pattern (Reversal or Continuation)A pin bar pattern consists of one price bar, typically a candlestick price bar, which represents a sharp reversal... Continue Reading

    Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (13)

    AboutNial Fuller

    Nial Fuller is a Professional Trader & Author who is considered ‘The Authority’ on Price Action Trading. He has a monthly readership of 250,000+ traders and has taught over 25,000+ students since 2008. Checkout Nial’s Price Action Trading Course here.

Support and Resistance Levels Trading Strategy – PriceAction.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the price action at support and resistance? ›

The support and resistance (S&R) are specific price points on a chart expected to attract the maximum amount of either buying or selling. The support price is a price at which one can expect more buyers than sellers. Likewise, the resistance price is a price at which one can expect more sellers than buyers.

How to find correct support and resistance levels? ›

If you are using trend lines, make sure you have at least three peaks or three troughs before you draw your lines, so that you have a useable trend line. Then, once you've plotted the trendlines onto your chart, your uptrend line will be the support level, while the donwtrend line will be the resistance level.

What is the most successful price action strategy? ›

The head and shoulders reversal trade is one of the most popular price action trading strategies as it's relatively easy to choose an entry point (generally right after the first shoulder) and to set a stop loss (after the second shoulder) to take advantage of a temporary peak (the head).

What are key levels of price action? ›

Key price levels are areas of support and resistance on a price chart, where the price tends to bounce or reverse. Support levels are where buyers tend to step in and push the price up, while resistance levels are where sellers tend to step in and push the price down.

How do you draw support and resistance in price action? ›

How to Draw Support and Resistance
  1. Open a price chart. The first step is to identify the instrument you want to analyze. ...
  2. Find the significant highs and lows. Look for the significant turning points or swing highs and lows. ...
  3. Draw the support and resistance lines. ...
  4. Check for validity.
Nov 23, 2023

What indicator do most traders use? ›

10 most popular indicators for trading
  • Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) ...
  • Stochastic Oscillator. ...
  • Bollinger Bands. ...
  • Relative Strength Index (RSI) ...
  • Fibonacci Retracement. ...
  • Standard Deviation. ...
  • Ichimoku Cloud. ...
  • Client Sentiment. IG client sentiment provides insights into the positioning of traders in a specific market.

Can you be profitable trading support and resistance? ›

When it comes to trading in financial markets, one of the key concepts that traders need to understand is support and resistance. These are the levels at which prices tend to stop or reverse their movements, and they can be incredibly useful in making profitable trades.

How accurate is support and resistance trading? ›

Technical analysis is not an exact science, and sometimes the price will dip below support levels or reverse before it gets to the prior support level. The same is true for resistance: Price may reverse before it gets to the prior resistance level or break above it.

How do you master support and resistance? ›

A Support and Resistance trading strategy that lets you profit from losing traders
  1. Mark your areas of Support & Resistance (SR)
  2. Wait for a directional move into SR.
  3. Wait for price rejection at SR.
  4. Enter on the next candle with stop loss beyond the swing high/low.
  5. Take profits at the swing high/low.
Sep 3, 2022

What is the 5 minute price action strategy? ›

The 5-Minute strategy is created to aid sellers and buyers engage in back tracking and spend some time in the location with the appearance of prices proceed in a latest route. The system depends upon exponential moving averages and the MACD forex trading indicators.

What time frame is best for price action? ›

There is no 'best' time frame. Time frames are merely different looks at the same picture; with the shorter or tighter time frames offering a more granular, detailed look at near-term price action.

What is the most aggressive pricing strategy? ›

Penetration pricing strategy, also known as an aggressive pricing strategy, is where price points are set deliberately low. This aims to encourage greater volumes of trade and attract more customers, potentially luring them away from competitors.

Is support and resistance buy or sell? ›

The most common trading strategy using support and resistance levels is buying (going long) when the price is closing in on the support level and selling (going short) when the price is moving closer to the resistance level.

What is support in price action? ›

What Is Support? Support, or a support level, refers to the price level that an asset does not fall below for period of time. An asset's support level is created by buyers entering the market whenever the asset dips to a lower price.

How do you know if price will break support and resistance? ›

The most reliable source for identifying support and resistance levels is historical prices, making them invaluable to traders. The key is to familiarise yourself with past patterns – sometimes from very recent activity – so you can recognise them if they appear again.

Is support and resistance profitable? ›

Support and resistance levels can be used to set stop-loss and take-profit levels for trades. Traders can set their stop-loss below support and their take-profit near resistance levels for long positions, and vice versa for short positions.

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