Keltner Channel Trading: ATR-Based Volatility Bands
Keltner Channels use ATR for smoother volatility bands than Bollinger. Learn breakout trading, squeeze setups, and EMA bounce strategies.
- Keltner = EMA ± ATR multiples. Smoother than Bollinger. Close outside = momentum breakout.
- Squeeze (BB inside KC) = extreme low volatility. Big move coming. Trade the expansion.
- Thrive displays Keltner Channels with squeeze detection and breakout alerts.
Explore Keltner Strategies
Click through Keltner Channel strategies:
Close outside Keltner Channel signals momentum breakout. Unlike Bollinger (std dev), Keltner uses ATR—more stable. Breakout with expanding channel = strong trend.
Setup
Price closes outside upper/lower channel
Enter on close outside channel. Trade in breakout direction. Pullback to middle (EMA) is buy/sell zone in trend. Don't fade channel breakouts.
What Are Keltner Channels?
Keltner Channels are volatility bands based on ATR. The center is typically a 20 EMA. Upper and lower bands are ATR multiples above and below. Unlike Bollinger's standard deviation, ATR gives smoother, more stable bands.
This stability makes Keltner better for trend following and less prone to false signals from sudden price spikes.
Keltner Strategies
Channel Breakout
Close outside channel = momentum. Trade in breakout direction. Expanding channel confirms strength. Middle EMA becomes support/resistance.
Squeeze Setup
Bollinger Bands inside Keltner = extreme squeeze. Volatility at minimum. Trade expansion when BB breaks outside KC. Major moves follow.
EMA Bounce
In trends, price pulls back to middle EMA. Buy bounces in uptrend, sell rallies in downtrend. Classic trend-following entry.
| Strategy | Setup | Market | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breakout | Close outside band | Trending | Trade with breakout |
| Squeeze | BB inside KC | Low volatility | Trade expansion |
| EMA Bounce | Touch middle | Trending | Buy/sell bounce |
| Channel Fade | Touch band | Ranging | Fade to middle |
The Keltner Squeeze
Squeeze = Bollinger inside Keltner. When Bollinger Bands (std dev based) contract so much they fit inside Keltner Channels (ATR based), volatility is at an extreme low. This predicts major expansion.
- Identify squeeze (BB inside KC)
- Wait for BB to expand outside KC
- Note expansion direction
- Trade in that direction
- Major move often follows
Common Mistakes
- Fading breakouts: Don't short upper band touch in uptrend. Momentum is real.
- Squeeze direction guessing: Wait for expansion—don't predict squeeze direction.
- Ignoring middle line: EMA is key support/resistance. Don't ignore it.
- Wrong market: Fade works in ranges. Breakout works in trends. Know which.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Keltner Channels?
Volatility bands using EMA (typically 20) as center with ATR-based bands above and below. Similar to Bollinger but uses ATR instead of standard deviation—more stable.
Keltner vs Bollinger Bands?
Bollinger uses standard deviation (more reactive). Keltner uses ATR (smoother). Keltner is more stable; Bollinger reacts more to sudden moves. Both useful.
What is the Keltner squeeze?
When Bollinger Bands contract inside Keltner Channel. Extreme low volatility. Big move coming. Used by TTM Squeeze indicator. Trade the expansion.
How do I trade Keltner breakouts?
Close outside channel = momentum breakout. Trade in breakout direction. Channel expansion confirms. Don't fade strong breakouts. Middle EMA becomes support.
Can I fade Keltner touches?
Only in ranging markets. Touch upper in range = short, touch lower = long. Target middle EMA. In trends, price walks the band—don't fade.
What are good Keltner settings?
20 EMA center, 2x ATR for bands is standard. 1.5x ATR for tighter bands. 2.5x for wider. Test for your timeframe and asset.
Does Keltner work for crypto?
Yes. ATR-based channels work well with crypto volatility. Squeeze setups are particularly useful. Filter with trend for best results.
What is the middle line used for?
20 EMA acts as dynamic support in uptrends and resistance in downtrends. Buy pullbacks to middle in uptrend. Target for mean reversion trades.