Support and Resistance
Support and Resistance is a core skill in technical analysis. The goal of this article is not to give you a magic setup, but to show you what the concept actually represents, how to identify it on a chart, and how disciplined traders use it.
What is Support and Resistance?
Support and Resistance can be defined precisely, but most traders learn a fuzzy version of it from social media. We start from the textbook definition and then translate it into something you can actually use on a live chart.
Understanding Support and Resistance well means understanding both what it claims to measure and what it cannot. Every concept in markets has assumptions baked in — when those assumptions break, the tool stops working.
Why it matters in real markets
In a live market, support and resistance interacts with order flow, liquidity, and the behavior of other participants. It is not an isolated signal — it is a piece of a larger picture.
- It changes the trades you take and the trades you skip.
- It shapes how you size positions and where you place stops.
- It influences how you measure whether your edge is real or random.
How to apply it
Theory only becomes useful when you put it in front of a chart or inside a backtest. We recommend a deliberate practice loop: form a hypothesis, mark it on historical charts, then test it forward in a journal before risking capital.
Treat support and resistance as a lens, not a rule. The traders who get the most out of it know exactly when to ignore it.
- Define your trigger in writing.
- Define your invalidation in writing.
- Log every trade and tag it with the setup.
- Review weekly and only adjust rules with at least 30 sample trades.
Common mistakes
The most common mistake is treating support and resistance as a standalone signal that should be followed mechanically. A second common mistake is changing the rules after every losing streak, which destroys any statistical signal you might have had.
Where to go next
Once you are comfortable with support and resistance, the next step is to combine it with one or two complementary concepts and test it on a specific market and timeframe. The library below contains the most useful follow-on topics.
Frequently asked questions
Is Support and Resistance suitable for beginners?
Support and Resistance is approachable for beginners conceptually, but applying it well usually requires comfort with the basics of order types, position sizing, and chart reading first.
Does Support and Resistance work in all markets?
The underlying idea generalises across liquid markets — equities, forex, futures, and major crypto pairs — but parameters and behaviour differ. Always validate on the specific instrument and timeframe you intend to trade.
What is the biggest risk when using Support and Resistance?
Treating it as a guaranteed signal. No concept in trading has a positive expectancy on its own without disciplined risk management, position sizing, and a tested execution plan.
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