10 Candlestick Patterns Every Trader Should Know
Master the most important candlestick patterns used by professional traders. Learn to identify bullish and bearish reversal patterns with real chart examples.
๐ Table of Contents
Understanding Candlesticks
Before diving into patterns, let's understand what a single candlestick tells us:
Anatomy of a Candlestick:
โ โ Upper Wick (High)
โ
โโโผโโ
โ โ โ โ Body (Open to Close)
โ โ โ
โโโผโโ
โ
โ โ Lower Wick (Low)
- Green body โ Close > Open (buyers won)
- Red body โ Close < Open (sellers won)
- Long body โ Strong conviction
- Short body โ Indecision
- Long upper wick โ Sellers pushed price down from highs
- Long lower wick โ Buyers pushed price up from lows
Important context: Single candlestick patterns are useful, but patterns with 2-3 candles in the context of the broader trend are significantly more reliable.
Now let's explore the 10 most powerful patterns:
1. Hammer (Bullish Reversal)
What it looks like:
- Small body at the TOP of the candle
- Long lower wick (2-3x the body length)
- Little to no upper wick
- Appears at the BOTTOM of a downtrend
What it means:
Sellers pushed price significantly lower during the session, but buyers stepped in forcefully and pushed price back up near the open. This shows strong buying interest at lower prices โ potential reversal incoming.
How to trade it:
- Wait for confirmation โ next candle should close bullish
- Enter above the hammer's high
- Stop loss below the hammer's low
- Target: next resistance level or 1:2 risk/reward
Reliability: โญโญโญโญ (Very reliable at support levels)
Inverted version: Inverted Hammer โ same principle but with long upper wick at bottom of downtrend. Slightly less reliable but still valid.
2. Engulfing Pattern
Bullish Engulfing:
- First candle: Small red body
- Second candle: Large green body that completely engulfs the first candle's body
- Appears at the bottom of a downtrend
Bearish Engulfing:
- First candle: Small green body
- Second candle: Large red body that completely engulfs the first
- Appears at the top of an uptrend
What it means:
The second candle represents a dramatic shift in control. In bullish engulfing, buyers overwhelmed sellers so decisively that they erased the entire previous session and then some.
How to trade it:
- Enter in the direction of the engulfing candle
- Stop loss beyond the engulfing candle's opposite extreme
- The larger the engulfing candle relative to the prior candle, the stronger the signal
Reliability: โญโญโญโญโญ (One of the most reliable reversal patterns)
3. Doji (Indecision)
What it looks like:
- Open and close are at (nearly) the same price
- Results in a cross or plus-sign shape
- Body is extremely small or non-existent
Variations:
- Standard Doji โ Equal upper and lower wicks
- Dragonfly Doji โ Long lower wick, no upper wick (bullish at support)
- Gravestone Doji โ Long upper wick, no lower wick (bearish at resistance)
- Long-legged Doji โ Very long wicks both directions (extreme indecision)
What it means:
Neither buyers nor sellers won the session. The market is at an inflection point. A doji after a strong trend often signals exhaustion and potential reversal.
How to trade it:
- Don't trade the doji alone โ wait for confirmation
- Doji at resistance + bearish next candle = short entry
- Doji at support + bullish next candle = long entry
- Multiple dojis in a row = major indecision, expect big move coming
Reliability: โญโญโญ (Requires confirmation, but excellent warning signal)
4. Morning Star / Evening Star
Morning Star (Bullish Reversal):
Three candles:
- Large red candle (strong selling)
- Small body (gap down) โ shows selling exhaustion
- Large green candle (strong buying recovery)
Evening Star (Bearish Reversal):
Three candles:
- Large green candle (strong buying)
- Small body (gap up) โ shows buying exhaustion
- Large red candle (strong selling)
What it means:
The trend is exhausting. The middle candle (star) shows indecision at the extreme, and the third candle confirms the reversal direction.
How to trade it:
- Enter at the close of the third candle (or next open)
- Stop loss beyond the middle candle's extreme
- Target: beginning of the original trend or key level
Reliability: โญโญโญโญโญ (Extremely reliable, especially with volume confirmation)
5. Shooting Star (Bearish Reversal)
What it looks like:
- Small body at the BOTTOM of the candle
- Long upper wick (2-3x body length)
- Little to no lower wick
- Appears at the TOP of an uptrend
What it means:
The opposite of a hammer. Buyers pushed price to new highs, but sellers aggressively rejected those levels, closing near the open. Shows strong selling pressure at higher prices.
How to trade it:
- Wait for bearish confirmation on next candle
- Enter below the shooting star's low
- Stop loss above the shooting star's high
- Target: next support level
Reliability: โญโญโญโญ (Very reliable at resistance levels)
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6. Three White Soldiers / Three Black Crows
Three White Soldiers (Bullish):
- Three consecutive large green candles
- Each closes higher than the previous
- Each opens within the body of the previous candle
- Appears after a downtrend or consolidation
Three Black Crows (Bearish):
- Three consecutive large red candles
- Each closes lower than the previous
- Each opens within the body of the previous candle
- Appears after an uptrend or consolidation
What it means:
Strong, sustained directional conviction over three periods. This isn't indecision โ it's a clear statement of trend direction.
How to trade it:
- Enter in trend direction after third candle closes
- Stop loss below the first candle (soldiers) or above it (crows)
- Be cautious if candles are extremely large โ might be overextended
Reliability: โญโญโญโญ (Strong trend confirmation pattern)
7. Pin Bar
What it looks like:
- Very small body (1/3 or less of total candle range)
- One wick is at least 2/3 of the total candle range
- Looks like a pin sticking out from price action
Bullish Pin Bar: Long lower wick at support
Bearish Pin Bar: Long upper wick at resistance
What it means:
Price was pushed strongly in one direction but was completely rejected. The long wick represents a "fake out" โ price tried to break a level but was pushed back. This rejection shows where the real power lies.
How to trade it:
- The nose (opposite of the long wick) is your entry direction
- Stop loss beyond the wick tip
- Best at support/resistance levels or trend lines
- Higher timeframe pin bars are more reliable
Reliability: โญโญโญโญโญ (Professional traders' favorite pattern)
8. Harami Pattern
Bullish Harami:
- First candle: Large red candle
- Second candle: Small green candle contained entirely within the first candle's body
Bearish Harami:
- First candle: Large green candle
- Second candle: Small red candle contained within the first candle's body
What it means:
"Harami" means pregnant in Japanese. The small candle (baby) inside the large candle (mother) represents diminishing momentum. The trend is running out of steam.
How to trade it:
- Wait for confirmation on the third candle
- Entry above/below the second candle
- Stop loss beyond the first candle's extreme
- Less aggressive than engulfing patterns โ use smaller position
Reliability: โญโญโญ (Moderate โ always needs confirmation)
9. Tweezer Tops & Bottoms
Tweezer Bottom (Bullish):
- Two or more candles with the same (or very similar) low
- Usually first candle is bearish, second is bullish
- Appears at the bottom of a downtrend
Tweezer Top (Bearish):
- Two or more candles with the same (or very similar) high
- Usually first candle is bullish, second is bearish
- Appears at the top of an uptrend
What it means:
The market found a price level it cannot break through. Two attempts to go lower (or higher) failed at the exact same level โ this is strong support/resistance.
How to trade it:
- Enter after the second candle confirms direction
- Stop loss just beyond the shared high/low
- Very tight risk because the stop is right at the level
Reliability: โญโญโญโญ (Excellent risk/reward due to tight stops)
10. Marubozu (Strong Momentum)
What it looks like:
- Long body with NO wicks (or extremely tiny wicks)
- Bullish Marubozu: Large green candle, open = low, close = high
- Bearish Marubozu: Large red candle, open = high, close = low
What it means:
Absolute dominance by one side. Buyers (or sellers) controlled the entire session from open to close without any significant pushback. This shows extreme conviction.
How to trade it:
- In the direction of the marubozu (never fade it)
- Wait for a small pullback to enter (don't chase)
- The marubozu candle itself acts as a support/resistance zone
- Stop loss at midpoint of the marubozu body
Reliability: โญโญโญโญ (Strong momentum signal โ trade with the direction)
How to Trade These Patterns
The Confluence Approach
No single pattern should be traded in isolation. The highest probability trades occur when patterns align with:
- Key support/resistance levels
- Trend direction (trade patterns that align with the bigger picture)
- Indicator confirmation (RSI oversold + bullish pattern = strong)
- Volume (higher volume on the pattern = more conviction)
- Multiple timeframe agreement
Pattern Priority Ranking
| Priority | Pattern | Best Use |
| 1 | Engulfing | Reversal at key levels |
| 2 | Pin Bar | Rejection at S/R |
| 3 | Morning/Evening Star | Major trend reversals |
| 4 | Hammer/Shooting Star | Quick reversal entries |
| 5 | Three Soldiers/Crows | Trend confirmation |
Risk Management for Pattern Trading
- Stop loss: Always beyond the pattern's extreme
- Position size: Calculate based on stop distance
- Win rate: Expect 55-65% with good pattern selection
- Risk/reward: Aim for minimum 1:2
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Continue Learning
Expand your technical analysis toolkit:
- Technical Analysis for Beginners โ The complete foundation of chart analysis beyond candlestick patterns.
- How to Read Trading Signals โ Apply pattern recognition to interpret professional trading signals.
- Risk Management Guide โ Combine pattern-based entries with proper position sizing and stop losses.
- What Are Trading Signals? โ Learn how candlestick patterns feed into automated signal generation.
- Trading Psychology Guide โ Master the discipline to wait for confirmed patterns instead of jumping the gun.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which candlestick pattern is most reliable?
The engulfing pattern and morning/evening star are statistically the most reliable reversal patterns, especially when they occur at key support/resistance levels with volume confirmation. Pin bars are also highly reliable in the hands of experienced traders.
Do candlestick patterns work in all markets?
Yes. Candlestick patterns work in stocks, forex, crypto, and commodities. They reflect human psychology which is universal across markets. However, they tend to be most reliable on higher timeframes (4H, daily, weekly) and may produce more false signals on very low timeframes.
How many candlestick patterns should a beginner learn?
Start with 3-5 key patterns: Hammer, Engulfing, Pin Bar, Doji, and Morning/Evening Star. Master these before expanding your repertoire. Knowing 5 patterns well beats knowing 50 patterns poorly.
Can candlestick patterns be used for automated trading?
Absolutely. Most algorithmic trading systems and AI signal providers (including SignalWhisper) use candlestick pattern recognition as one component of their analysis. Computers can scan thousands of charts instantly for pattern formation.
What timeframe is best for candlestick patterns?
Daily and 4-hour charts produce the most reliable candlestick signals. Patterns on the weekly chart are even more significant but occur less frequently. Avoid relying solely on patterns below the 1-hour timeframe as noise increases dramatically.
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