ADX Trend Strength: Know When to Trend Trade or Range Trade
ADX measures how strong a trend is—not its direction. Use it to know whether to apply trend-following or mean-reversion strategies to current market conditions.
- ADX > 25 = strong trend, use trend strategies. ADX < 20 = no trend, use range strategies.
- +DI > -DI = bullish direction. -DI > +DI = bearish. ADX shows strength; DI shows direction.
- Thrive displays ADX with trend strength and direction indicators.
Explore ADX Readings
Click through ADX signal types:
ADX > 25 indicates strong trend. Rising ADX = trend strengthening. Use trend-following strategies. Direction determined by +DI/-DI.
ADX Reading
ADX above 25, rising
ADX > 25 = trade trend strategies. +DI > -DI = bullish trend, look for longs. -DI > +DI = bearish trend, look for shorts. Avoid mean reversion here.
What Is ADX?
ADX measures trend strength, not direction. It tells you HOW strong the trend is, whether up or down. High ADX = strong trend. Low ADX = weak or no trend. Direction comes from +DI (positive directional indicator) and -DI (negative).
This is crucial: ADX helps you choose the right strategy for current conditions. Trend strategies fail in ranges. Range strategies fail in trends. ADX tells you which environment you're in.
ADX Readings
ADX < 20: No Trend
Market is ranging or consolidating. Trend strategies will whipsaw. Use mean reversion—buy support, sell resistance.
ADX 20-25: Trend Developing
Trend may be starting. Watch for breakout. Prepare trend strategy but confirm first.
ADX > 25: Strong Trend
Clear trend in place. Use trend-following strategies. Don't fade the trend. +DI vs -DI shows direction.
ADX > 50: Very Strong
Extremely strong trend. Ride it but watch for exhaustion. ADX turning down from here = trend may be ending.
| ADX Level | Trend Strength | Strategy | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 20 | None/Weak | Range trading | Mean reversion |
| 20-25 | Developing | Watch/prepare | Breakout potential |
| 25-50 | Strong | Trend following | +DI/-DI for direction |
| > 50 | Very strong | Ride but watch | Exhaustion possible |
+DI and -DI for Direction
ADX tells strength. +DI/-DI tell direction.
- +DI > -DI: Bullish trend direction
- -DI > +DI: Bearish trend direction
- Crossover: +DI crossing -DI = direction change signal
Combine: ADX > 25 + (+DI > -DI) = strong bullish trend. ADX > 25 + (-DI > +DI) = strong bearish trend.
Common Mistakes
- ADX for direction: ADX doesn't show direction—use +DI/-DI for that.
- Ignoring environment: Same strategy won't work in both trending and ranging.
- Low ADX = short: Low ADX doesn't mean bearish—it means no trend.
- ADX peak = reversal: ADX turning down = trend weakening, not necessarily reversing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is ADX?
Average Directional Index—measures trend strength (not direction). ADX > 25 = strong trend. ADX < 20 = weak/no trend. Derived from Directional Movement Index (DMI).
What do +DI and -DI mean?
+DI measures positive directional movement (upward). -DI measures negative (downward). +DI > -DI = bullish. -DI > +DI = bearish. Combine with ADX for strength.
How do I read ADX levels?
ADX < 20 = no significant trend, use range strategies. ADX 20-25 = trend developing. ADX > 25 = strong trend, use trend strategies. ADX > 50 = very strong.
ADX is rising—what does it mean?
Rising ADX = trend strengthening (regardless of direction). Falling ADX = trend weakening. ADX shows intensity, not direction—use +DI/-DI for direction.
How do I trade +DI/-DI crossovers?
+DI crossing above -DI = bullish signal (if ADX > 20). -DI crossing above +DI = bearish. Filter crossovers by ADX level for reliability.
What is ADX peak?
When ADX peaks (turns down from high level), trend may be exhausting. Not a reversal signal—trend can continue—but momentum is waning.
Can I use ADX for entries?
ADX is better as a filter than entry signal. Use it to determine whether to use trend or range strategy. Then use other tools for entries.
Does ADX work for crypto?
Yes. Crypto trends strongly, making ADX valuable for identifying trending periods. Helps avoid trend strategies in consolidation phases.