Chart Patterns
Classic geometric price patterns that reveal the battle between buyers and sellers. Identify trend reversals, continuations, and breakout setups.
Reversal 5 patterns
Double Top
bearishA bearish reversal pattern where price reaches a high twice with a moderate decline between, forming an 'M' shape.
Double Bottom
bullishA bullish reversal pattern where price reaches a low twice with a moderate rally between, forming a 'W' shape.
Head and Shoulders
bearishA bearish reversal with three peaks — the middle (head) higher than the two sides (shoulders) — connected by a neckline.
Inverse Head and Shoulders
bullishA bullish reversal with three troughs — the middle (head) lower than the two sides (shoulders) — connected by a neckline.
Rounding Bottom
bullishA long-term bullish reversal forming a gradual 'U' shape as selling pressure slowly transitions to buying pressure.
Continuation 3 patterns
Cup with Handle
bullishA bullish continuation where a rounded bottom (cup) is followed by a small pullback (handle) before breaking out higher.
Bullish Flag
bullishA bullish continuation where a sharp rally (pole) is followed by a tight, downward-sloping consolidation (flag).
Bearish Flag
bearishA bearish continuation where a sharp decline (pole) is followed by a tight, upward-sloping consolidation (flag).
Bilateral 5 patterns
Ascending Triangle
bullishA pattern with a flat resistance line and rising support, usually breaking upward as buyers become more aggressive.
Descending Triangle
bearishA pattern with a flat support line and declining resistance, usually breaking downward as sellers become more aggressive.
Symmetrical Triangle
bilateralA pattern with converging trendlines of roughly equal slope, indicating indecision before a breakout in either direction.
Rising Wedge
bearishConverging upward-sloping trendlines where resistance rises slower than support, typically breaking down.
Falling Wedge
bullishConverging downward-sloping trendlines where support falls slower than resistance, typically breaking up.
No patterns found
Try "double top", "flag", "triangle", or "bullish"
About Chart Patterns
Chart patterns form over days to weeks as price action creates recognizable geometric shapes. Unlike candlestick patterns (1-3 candles), chart patterns capture larger structural shifts in supply and demand. Confirmation with volume and a break of the pattern boundary is essential before acting.