Range Trading Strategies: How to Trade Sideways Markets
Markets trend only 30% of the time. Learn to profit during the other 70%—when price bounces between support and resistance in predictable ranges.
- Range trading profits from sideways markets by buying support and selling resistance—predictable bounces, defined risk.
- Accumulation ranges break up, distribution ranges break down—count boundary touches to identify which.
- Thrive identifies range boundaries and alerts you when price reaches tradeable levels.
Explore Range Patterns
Click through different range types to understand their characteristics:
Range Size
$4,000
6.2%
Phase
accumulation
Price Position
20%
of range
Price has tested support (range low) 4 times and held each time. More tests of support than resistance suggests buyers are absorbing supply at these levels. Volume typically declining as range matures. Accumulation pattern forming.
Buy near range low with stops below support. Target range high or breakout above. Each successful test of support increases probability of eventual upside breakout. Watch for volume surge on breakout attempt.
What Is Range Trading?
Range trading is a strategy for sideways markets. Instead of trying to predict direction, you trade the predictable bounces between defined support and resistance levels. Buy low, sell high—literally.
Most traders lose money trying to trend trade in ranging markets. They get chopped up by false breakouts and reversals. Range traders embrace the chop—profiting from the very conditions that frustrate trend traders.
Identifying Trading Ranges
What Makes a Valid Range
- Clear support: Price has bounced from the same level 2-3+ times.
- Clear resistance: Price has rejected from the same level 2-3+ times.
- Width matters: Range should be wide enough to profit after fees and slippage. 3%+ minimum for most traders.
- Time context: Ranges need time to establish. A 2-hour range is noise; a 2-week range is structure.
Range Quality Indicators
- More touches = stronger boundaries: Each test that holds reinforces the level.
- Declining volume: Healthy ranges see volume contract as they mature.
- Clean bounces: Price should respect levels cleanly, not chop through messily.
| Range Type | Support Touches | Resistance Touches | Likely Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accumulation | 4+ | 1-2 | Upside breakout |
| Distribution | 1-2 | 4+ | Downside breakdown |
| Consolidation | 3 | 3 | Either direction—wait |
| Failing Range | Diminishing | Increasing | Breakdown likely |
Trading Range Bounces
Buying Support
Enter long when price approaches range support (range low). Wait for confirmation: rejection candle, bullish divergence, or order flow showing buyers stepping in. Stop below support. Target range high or take partial at midrange.
Selling Resistance
Enter short (or sell longs) when price approaches range resistance (range high). Wait for confirmation: rejection candle, bearish divergence, or order flow showing sellers stepping in. Stop above resistance. Target range low.
Risk Management
Stops should be outside the range boundary—if price breaks through, the range has failed. Position size based on distance from entry to stop. Risk/reward should be at least 1:2 (target is range opposite end).
Accumulation vs Distribution
Accumulation Range
Smart money is buying during the range, preparing for upside breakout. Signs:
- More tests of support than resistance (buyers defending floor)
- Volume declining as range matures
- Higher lows forming within range (subtle)
- Eventually breaks out upward on volume surge
Distribution Range
Smart money is selling during the range, preparing for downside breakdown. Signs:
- More tests of resistance than support (sellers capping ceiling)
- Volume declining as range matures
- Lower highs forming within range (subtle)
- Eventually breaks down on volume surge
Related reading: Market Structure Breaks
Trading Range Breakouts
Ranges eventually break. The question is which direction and whether the breakout is real.
Breakout Confirmation
- Volume surge: True breakouts have significantly higher volume than range activity.
- Candle close: Wait for candle to close beyond the boundary, not just wick through.
- Retest: Best entries come on pullback to the broken level (old resistance = new support).
Fakeout Warning Signs
- Low volume on the break
- Immediate reversal back into range
- Break against the range bias (breaking up from distribution range)
Common Range Trading Mistakes
- Trading too-narrow ranges: Fees and slippage eat profits. Need 3%+ range width minimum.
- No confirmation: Don't buy just because price touched support. Wait for rejection.
- Fighting breakouts: Once range breaks with volume, don't fade it hoping for return.
- Ignoring range age: Old, well-tested ranges are more reliable than new, untested ones.
- Missing bias: Accumulation ranges favor longs; distribution favor shorts. Trade with the bias.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is range trading?
Range trading is a strategy for sideways markets where price oscillates between defined support (floor) and resistance (ceiling). Traders buy near support and sell near resistance, profiting from the predictable bounces rather than directional moves.
How do I identify a range?
A range forms when price tests the same support and resistance levels multiple times without breaking through. Look for at least 2-3 touches of each boundary. More touches = more defined range. Range should be wide enough to trade profitably after fees.
What is accumulation range?
Accumulation is when smart money buys during a range, preparing for eventual upside breakout. Signs: more tests of support than resistance (buyers defending), declining volume as range matures, eventual upside breakout on high volume.
What is distribution range?
Distribution is when smart money sells during a range, preparing for eventual downside breakdown. Signs: more tests of resistance than support (sellers capping), declining volume, eventual downside breakdown on high volume.
How do I trade range boundaries?
Buy at support: enter near range low after price shows respect (rejection candle, bullish divergence). Stop below support. Target range high. Sell at resistance: enter near range high after rejection. Stop above resistance. Target range low.
How do I trade range breakouts?
Wait for price to convincingly break the range boundary with volume confirmation. Enter on pullback to the broken level (old resistance becomes support, or vice versa). Stop inside the range. Target the range width projected from breakout point.
What causes ranges to break?
Ranges break when one side exhausts. Catalysts: news events, volume surge, expiring options/futures, whale activity, or simply time (ranges can't last forever). The longer a range, the more explosive the eventual breakout often is.
How long do crypto ranges last?
Ranges can last hours to months. Short-term ranges (hours/days) are common during consolidation. Extended ranges (weeks/months) often precede major moves. The longer the range, the more significant the eventual breakout typically is.