Breakout Confirmation: How to Trade Real Breakouts vs Fakeouts
Breakouts create the biggest moves—but most breakouts fail. Learn to separate real breakouts from fakeouts using volume confirmation and the retest entry strategy.
- Real breakouts have volume confirmation (2-3x average), strong candle close, and follow-through.
- Fakeouts happen on low volume and trap traders—but they become powerful reversal signals.
- Thrive validates breakouts with volume analysis and alerts you to both real breaks and fakeout traps.
Analyze Breakout Scenarios
Click through different breakout scenarios to understand what separates real from fake:
Breakout Type
real breakout
Volume
high
Price Action
Strong close above resistance with volume surge
Price broke resistance with significantly higher-than-average volume and closed strongly above the level. The candle body is large with minimal wick. This is a high-probability real breakout—volume confirms participation.
Enter on close or wait for pullback to broken level. Stop below the breakout candle low or previous resistance. Target: measured move (range projected above breakout) or next resistance level.
What Is a Breakout?
A breakout occurs when price moves beyond a defined support or resistance level. Breakouts signal that the balance of supply and demand has shifted—either buyers have overwhelmed sellers (upside breakout) or vice versa.
Breakouts are significant because they often lead to sustained moves. The energy built up during consolidation releases in the breakout direction. However, not all breakouts are genuine—distinguishing real from fake is crucial.
Volume Confirmation
Volume is the most important breakout confirmation tool. Real breakouts require participation—lots of traders committing capital in the breakout direction.
What Good Breakout Volume Looks Like
- 2-3x average: Minimum threshold for significant breakout.
- 5x+ average: Very strong breakout with high conviction.
- Expanding on breakout: Volume should spike on the breakout candle itself.
- Follow-through: Volume should remain elevated, not immediately collapse.
Red Flags
- Below-average volume on breakout
- Volume spike but immediate collapse
- Breakout on news then quick reversal
| Breakout Type | Volume | Close | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strong real breakout | 3x+ average | Body well beyond level | High (80%+) |
| Moderate breakout | 2x average | Close beyond level | Medium (60%) |
| Weak breakout | <2x average | Close at level | Low (40%) |
| Likely fakeout | <1x average | Wick only/close back inside | Very low (20%) |
Understanding Fakeouts
Fakeouts are failed breakouts that reverse back into the range. They trap traders who entered on the initial break, then use their stop-outs as fuel for the opposite move.
Why Fakeouts Happen
- Stop hunts: Market makers trigger stops above/below levels then reverse
- Insufficient demand: Not enough buyers/sellers to sustain the move
- News spikes: Emotional reaction quickly fades
- Manipulation: Large players create false breaks to accumulate/distribute
Trading Fakeouts
Fakeouts become powerful reversal signals. A failed upside breakout (bull trap) becomes a short signal. Enter when price closes back inside the range with stop above the failed breakout high.
The Retest Entry Strategy
The retest entry is the safest way to trade breakouts. Instead of chasing the initial break, wait for price to pull back and test the broken level.
How It Works
- Price breaks resistance with volume
- Price moves higher then pulls back
- Former resistance now acts as support
- Enter long on signs of support holding
- Stop below the retest low
Advantages
- Better entry price than chasing breakout
- Tighter stop placement (retest low)
- Confirms the breakout is real (level now holds)
- Avoids fakeouts that never retest
Tradeoff: some strong breakouts never retest—they continue without looking back. Balance by entering partial on breakout, adding on retest.
Related reading: Range Trading Strategies
Breakout Targets: Measured Move
The measured move projects the range height above the breakout point. This gives a minimum expected target based on the consolidation energy.
- Measure: range high minus range low = range height
- Project: add range height to breakout level
- Example: Range from $65k to $70k ($5k height). Breakout above $70k → target $75k
This is a conservative target. Strong breakouts often exceed the measured move, but it's a good place for first profit taking.
Common Breakout Trading Mistakes
- Chasing without volume: No volume = no conviction = likely fakeout
- Entering on wick: Wait for candle close. Wicks above levels often retrace.
- Ignoring range bias: Breakouts against accumulation/distribution pattern fail more often
- Wide stops: If your stop is too far from entry, you sized wrong
- Not trading fakeouts: Failed breakouts are signals—trade them
Frequently Asked Questions
What confirms a real breakout?
Volume confirmation is key: real breakouts have significantly higher volume than average. Also watch for: strong candle close beyond level (not just wick), follow-through in subsequent candles, and successful retest of broken level as new support/resistance.
What is a fakeout?
A fakeout is a false breakout where price briefly breaks a level then reverses back. Often called bull traps (fake upside break) or bear traps (fake downside break). Usually happens on low volume and traps traders who entered on the initial break.
Should I enter on breakout or wait for retest?
Waiting for retest offers better R:R—you enter at a better price with stop placement at the retest rejection. The tradeoff: some breakouts don't retest and you miss the move. Balance by entering partial on breakout, adding on retest.
How much volume confirms a breakout?
Generally, 2-3x average volume on the breakout candle is significant. Compare to recent average rather than all-time. Very strong breakouts can see 5x+ volume. Low volume breakouts (<100% average) are suspicious.
What causes fakeouts?
Fakeouts happen when: (1) stop hunting—MMs trigger stops above/below levels then reverse, (2) insufficient buying/selling to sustain the move, (3) news-driven spikes that quickly reverse, (4) trapped traders provide fuel for reversal.
How do I trade a failed breakout?
Failed breakouts are powerful signals in the opposite direction. If long breakout fails, it becomes a short signal. Enter when price closes back inside the range with stop above the failed breakout high. Trapped longs provide selling fuel.
What is the measured move target?
After breakout, the measured move projects the range height above the breakout level. If range was $1000 wide, target is $1000 above breakout. This gives a minimum expected move based on the energy built up during consolidation.
Does breakout direction matter in ranging markets?
Yes. Accumulation ranges tend to break up (more support tests). Distribution ranges break down (more resistance tests). Count touches of each boundary to determine range bias. Breaking against bias = higher fakeout probability.