How to Read Crypto Order Books: A Complete Guide
The order book shows what's happening beneath the price chart—real-time supply and demand at every price level. Learn to read it and you'll see the market through different eyes. But beware: not everything in the order book is what it seems.
- Order book = live list of buy (bid) and sell (ask) orders at each price level.
- Buy walls suggest support, sell walls suggest resistance—but large walls can be fake (spoofing).
- Thrive's signals incorporate significant order book activity when it matters for the market context.
What is an Order Book?
An order book is a real-time list of all outstanding buy and sell orders for an asset on an exchange. It's organized by price level: all buy orders (bids) at each price on one side, all sell orders (asks) on the other.
The order book reveals information that price charts don't show: where is buying interest concentrated? Where are sellers waiting? How much volume would it take to move price to a certain level? This is the raw supply and demand that drives price movement.
Understanding order books gives you an edge—you can see potential support and resistance before price gets there, gauge liquidity for larger orders, and spot unusual activity that might signal something happening.
Order Book Basics Visualized
Order Book Visualization
Current price: $43,000
BIDS (Buy Orders)
Buy wall at $42,900
ASKS (Sell Orders)
Sell wall at $43,200
The buy wall at $42,900 may act as support. The sell wall at $43,200 may act as resistance.
Understanding Bid-Ask Spread
The spread is the gap between the highest bid and lowest ask. It's a measure of market liquidity and trading cost.
| Spread Type | What It Indicates | Trading Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Tight spread (0.01-0.05%) | High liquidity, active trading | Lower cost to enter/exit positions |
| Wide spread (0.1%+) | Low liquidity, less active | Higher cost, potential slippage |
| Spread widening | Increased volatility, uncertainty | Be cautious with market orders |
When you use a market order, you pay the spread. If the spread is 0.1%, you're immediately down 0.1% on entry. This is why limit orders at favorable prices save money, and why low-spread pairs are preferable for frequent trading.
Buy Walls and Sell Walls
Walls are large orders at specific price levels that appear as prominent blocks in the order book. They're significant because they represent concentrated supply or demand.
Buy Wall
Large bid orders at a price level. Suggests strong demand—price may bounce here as buyers absorb selling. Can act as support.
Sell Wall
Large ask orders at a price level. Suggests strong supply—price may struggle to break through. Can act as resistance.
But here's the critical caveat: walls can be fake. This brings us to one of the order book's biggest pitfalls—spoofing.
The Spoofing Problem
Spoofing is placing large fake orders to manipulate perception, then canceling before they're filled. It's illegal in regulated markets but still occurs in crypto. Understanding it protects you from manipulation.
Watch Out: Order Book Spoofing
Large buy wall appears at $42,000, making traders think there's strong support.
Traders buy, expecting price to bounce off the wall.
As price approaches $42,000, the wall suddenly disappears—it was fake.
Price crashes through the level without support. Trapped buyers panic sell.
Spoofing is illegal in many markets but still occurs. Don't trust walls blindly—watch if they get filled or pulled.
How to protect yourself: Don't trust walls blindly. Watch if orders actually get filled (absorbed) rather than pulled (canceled) as price approaches. Real support/resistance involves actual trades, not just sitting orders.
Practical Order Book Tips
Watch for changes, not static snapshots
A wall appearing or disappearing tells you more than a static view. Real-time changes reveal intent.
Don't trade solely on order book data
Order books are one input. Combine with price action, volume, and other signals for confirmation.
Check multiple exchanges
Order books differ by exchange. The real supply/demand picture is distributed across venues.
Use depth charts for visualization
Depth charts show cumulative orders at each price. Useful for seeing the overall supply/demand picture.
Focus on absorption vs pulling
When price hits a wall, does the wall get filled (real) or disappear (fake)? This distinguishes genuine levels from spoofs.
Consider market depth for sizing
Before placing large orders, check depth at your target prices. Thin books mean more slippage.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an order book?
An order book is a real-time electronic list of all buy and sell orders for an asset at different price levels. Bids (buy orders) are on one side, asks (sell orders) on the other. It shows the supply and demand at each price level and helps traders understand market depth and where significant support or resistance might exist.
What is bid and ask?
The bid is the highest price buyers are currently willing to pay. The ask (or offer) is the lowest price sellers are willing to accept. The difference between bid and ask is called the "spread." Tight spreads indicate liquid markets with active trading. Wide spreads suggest low liquidity or high volatility.
What is a buy wall?
A buy wall is a large bid order (or cluster of orders) at a specific price level that appears as a large block on the bid side of the order book. Buy walls suggest strong demand at that level and often act as support—price may bounce off that level as buyers absorb selling pressure.
What is a sell wall?
A sell wall is a large ask order at a specific price level. It appears as a large block on the ask side and suggests significant supply/resistance. Price often struggles to break through sell walls as sellers absorb buying pressure. Breaking through a sell wall can signal strong bullish momentum.
Can order books be manipulated?
Yes, through a practice called "spoofing." Traders place large fake orders to influence other traders' perception of supply/demand, then cancel before execution. A massive buy wall might make you bullish, but it disappears when price approaches. Order books show current orders, but those orders can change or disappear instantly.
What is market depth?
Market depth refers to the total volume of orders at different price levels in the order book. Deep markets have lots of orders across many price levels—large trades don't move price much. Shallow markets have sparse orders—even moderate trades can cause significant price movement. Depth charts visualize this graphically.
How do I use order books for trading?
Use order books to: (1) Identify potential support/resistance at large order clusters, (2) Gauge liquidity before placing large orders, (3) Spot unusual activity that might signal something happening, (4) Time entries near bid/ask to reduce slippage. But always combine with other analysis—order books are just one tool.
How does Thrive help with order flow?
Thrive's signals incorporate significant market data including unusual order book activity when relevant. Large walls appearing or disappearing, unusual depth changes—these can signal important market dynamics. Combined with price action and other data, it provides context for what's happening beneath the surface.