ATR Trading Strategies: Volatility-Based Stops and Targets
ATR measures what the market actually moves. Use it to set stops that respect volatility, targets that are realistic, and position sizes that normalize risk.
- ATR = average volatility. Shows how much price typically moves. Set stops/targets as ATR multiples.
- 2x ATR stop adapts to volatility. Position size = Risk / (ATR × multiple) normalizes risk across assets.
- Thrive calculates ATR-based stops, targets, and position sizes automatically.
Explore ATR Strategies
Click through ATR applications:
Set stops based on volatility, not arbitrary amounts. 2x ATR gives room for normal noise while catching real reversals. Adapts to market conditions.
Entry at $100, ATR = $5. Stop = $100 - (2 × $5) = $90 for long. Adjust multiple based on timeframe and strategy. Higher TF = higher multiple. Trends = wider. Ranges = tighter.
What Is ATR?
Average True Range measures volatility. It tells you how much price typically moves, accounting for gaps. A stock with $2 ATR moves about $2 per period on average. One with $10 ATR moves $10.
This matters for trading because stops, targets, and position sizes should be based on what the market actually does—not arbitrary numbers. ATR grounds your trading in reality.
ATR Applications
ATR Stops
Set stops as ATR multiples. Entry at $100, ATR = $5, using 2x multiple: stop at $90 (long) or $110 (short). Gives room for normal volatility while catching real reversals.
ATR Targets
Set realistic targets. If ATR is $5, expecting $50 move intraday is unrealistic. 2-4x ATR is reasonable depending on timeframe and strategy.
ATR Position Sizing
Normalize risk: Position = Risk$ / (ATR × stop multiple). Risk $100, ATR = $5, 2x stop: Position = $100 / $10 = 10 units. Keeps risk consistent regardless of volatility.
ATR Filter
ATR below average = low volatility, range-bound. ATR above average = high volatility, trending. Match strategy to environment.
| Use | Formula | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Stops | Entry ± (ATR × multiple) | Volatility-adaptive stops |
| Targets | Entry ± (ATR × multiple) | Realistic profit targets |
| Sizing | Risk / (ATR × mult) | Normalized risk |
| Filter | ATR vs average ATR | Match strategy to volatility |
Choosing ATR Multiples
For Stops
- 1-1.5x ATR: Tight stops. More stops hit, but when right, better R:R.
- 2x ATR: Standard. Balances giving room vs protecting capital.
- 3x+ ATR: Wide stops. Fewer stopped out, but larger losses when wrong.
For Targets
Match to your R:R goals. If stop is 2x ATR and you want 2:1 R:R, target is 4x ATR. Be realistic—larger ATR targets need more time or trend strength.
ATR Trailing Stops
Trail stops using ATR. Instead of fixed trail, use ATR multiple below (long) or above (short) recent high/low. Adapts to volatility—tighter in calm, wider in volatile.
Chandelier Exit is popular: highest high minus ATR multiple for longs. Keeps you in trends while protecting against reversals.
Common Mistakes
- Same stop for all assets: $100 stop on $10 stock vs $1000 stock is very different risk. Use ATR.
- Unrealistic targets: Expecting 10x ATR move intraday won't work. Ground in reality.
- Ignoring ATR environment: Trend strategy in low ATR = whipsaw. Match approach.
- Too tight stops: 0.5x ATR stop gets hit by noise. Give room.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is ATR?
Average True Range—measures volatility by averaging the true range (max of: current high-low, |high-previous close|, |low-previous close|) over N periods. Shows how much price typically moves.
How is ATR calculated?
True Range = max(High-Low, |High-PrevClose|, |Low-PrevClose|). ATR = average of TR over N periods (typically 14). Smoothed average commonly used.
How do I use ATR for stops?
Set stops as multiple of ATR from entry. Example: 2x ATR stop. If ATR is $5, stop is $10 from entry. Adapts to volatility—wider in volatile markets, tighter in calm.
What ATR multiple for stops?
1.5-2x ATR for active trading. 2-3x for swing trading. Higher timeframe = potentially higher multiple. Test what works for your strategy.
How do I use ATR for targets?
Set targets as multiples of ATR. 2x ATR for scalps, 3-4x for swings. If ATR is $5 and you want 3:1 R:R with 2x ATR stop, target is 6x ATR.
What is ATR position sizing?
Size positions so equal dollar risk regardless of volatility. Position = Risk$ / (ATR × multiple). High ATR = smaller position. Normalizes risk across assets.
Can ATR predict direction?
No. ATR measures volatility magnitude, not direction. Rising ATR = increasing volatility. Falling ATR = decreasing volatility. Use with directional indicators.
What is ATR breakout?
When ATR breaks above its average, volatility is expanding—breakout likely. When ATR is below average, consolidation—range strategies better. Match strategy to ATR environment.