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Trading Breakouts and Fakeouts

Learn how to trade breakouts from support and resistance while avoiding fakeouts.

Last reviewed: 2026-03-06

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Overview

A breakout occurs when price moves decisively above resistance or below support. Fakeouts happen when price briefly breaks a level then reverses. Use volume, confirmation candles, and retests to filter genuine breakouts.

Breakout vs fakeoutBreakoutFakeoutWait for confirmation before entering
Breakout: clean break. Fakeout: break then reversal.

Breakout Confirmation

Wait for confirmation before entering a breakout. A strong close beyond the level is better than a wick. A full-bodied candle breaking through is more convincing than a doji. Some traders wait for a retest of the broken level as new support or resistance before entering.

Avoiding Fakeouts

Fakeouts are common. To reduce them: avoid entering on the first touch of a level during news. Wait for a candle to close beyond the level. Use multiple time frame analysis—breakouts on higher timeframes are more reliable. Consider waiting for a pullback and retest.

Retest Entries

After a breakout, price often retests the broken level. Former resistance becomes support (in an upward breakout); former support becomes resistance (in a downward breakout). Entering on the retest can offer a better risk-reward than chasing the initial break.

Knowledge check

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A fakeout is when:

FAQ

Common questions about this topic.

What is a fakeout?

When price briefly breaks a level then reverses. Often used by smart money to trigger stop losses before the real move.

Should I enter on the breakout or wait for a retest?

Both can work. Entering on the break catches the move earlier; waiting for a retest often offers better risk-reward but may miss the move.

How do I confirm a breakout?

Wait for a candle to close beyond the level. A strong close is better than a wick. Volume can help but is less reliable in forex.

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Disclaimer and sources

Educational content only. Not financial advice.

Important disclaimer

Forex trading involves substantial risk of loss. This content is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice.