Trading Breakouts in Crypto: Identifying Real Moves vs Fakeouts
Breakout trading offers some of the best risk/reward setups in crypto—when done right. The challenge is distinguishing real breakouts from fakeouts designed to trap traders. Here's how to identify high-probability breakouts.
- Real breakouts have volume confirmation, clean closes beyond level, and often follow multiple tests.
- Fakeouts show low volume, long wicks, and immediate reversal. Waiting for confirmation filters many out.
- Thrive alerts you when price approaches key levels with volume spikes—catching breakout opportunities in real-time.
What Makes a Good Breakout
A breakout is price breaking through a level that has held multiple times.The more times a level has been tested and held, the more significant it becomes. When it finally breaks, trapped traders exit and new traders enter—creating momentum.
The key is "significant level." Price briefly crossing a random line isn't a breakout. Price smashing through resistance that rejected it 5 times over 3 weeks—that's a breakout worth trading.
Volume confirms intent. Low volume breakouts often fakeout because there's no real participation. High volume shows conviction—real money committing to the move.
Real Breakout vs Fakeout
Learn to distinguish between high-probability breakouts and likely fakeouts:
Real Breakout
- ✓Volume 2x+ average on break
- ✓Clean candle close beyond level
- ✓Follow-through on next candles
- ✓Retest holds if it occurs
- ✓Level tested multiple times before
Fakeout Warning Signs
- ✗Low volume on break
- ✗Long wick, small body
- ✗Immediate reversal
- ✗First test of level
- ✗Against higher timeframe trend
Breakout Entry Checklist
Use this checklist before entering any breakout trade:
Breakout Entry Checklist
Level tested 2+ times before
Multiple tests = significant level. First test means nothing.
Volume spikes on break
No volume = suspect. Real breakouts have conviction.
Candle closes beyond level
Wicks don't count. Wait for close.
Higher timeframe trend aligned
Breakout with trend > breakout against trend.
Clear pattern preceding
Triangle, range, flag—structure adds confluence.
Breakout Entry Strategies
Immediate Entry
Enter as soon as candle closes beyond level with volume confirmation. Fast but risk of fakeout. Use tight stop below breakout level.
Retest Entry
Wait for price to break out, pull back to test the broken level (now support), and bounce. More confirmation but might miss fast moves.
Partial Entry + Add
Enter 50% on breakout, add 50% on retest. Gets you in if no retest, but lets you average in if there is one. Balanced approach.
Time Confirmation
Wait for breakout to hold for X candles (e.g., 4 hourly candles above resistance). Filters fakeouts that reverse quickly.
Stop Loss Placement
| Placement | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Just below breakout level | Tight stop, good R:R | Risk of stop hunt fakeout |
| Below last swing low | More room, survives noise | Wider stop, lower R:R |
| Below pattern structure | Only hit if trade thesis wrong | Widest stop, may be too far |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a breakout in trading?
A breakout occurs when price moves decisively through a level of support or resistance that has been tested multiple times. It signals a potential shift in supply/demand dynamics and often leads to strong continuation in the breakout direction. Breakouts are high-probability entries when confirmed.
What causes breakouts?
Breakouts happen when accumulated orders at a level get exhausted or when new participants enter. After multiple tests of resistance, sellers at that level have sold. One final push breaks through with no one left to sell. The same logic applies to support breakdowns.
What is a fakeout?
A fakeout (false breakout) is when price briefly breaks a level then immediately reverses back. Fakeouts trap traders who entered on the breakout, forcing them to exit at a loss. They're common in crypto and can be avoided with confirmation techniques.
How do I confirm a real breakout?
Key confirmations: (1) Volume spike—real breakouts have high volume, (2) Candle close beyond level (not just wick), (3) Retest of broken level as new support/resistance, (4) Time—hold for multiple candles, not just minutes. Multiple confirmations increase probability.
Should I enter on the breakout or wait for retest?
Both approaches work. Breakout entry: faster entry, risk of fakeout. Retest entry: confirmation but might miss move if no retest occurs. Many traders enter partial on breakout, add on retest. Match your approach to your risk tolerance.
Where should I place my stop loss on breakout trades?
Common placements: (1) Below the breakout level (tight, risks stop hunt), (2) Below the last swing low before breakout (more room), (3) Below the pattern/structure that preceded the breakout (safest but wider). Balance protection with realistic market noise.
How do I avoid getting stopped out by fakeouts?
Wait for confirmation (volume, candle close). Give stops reasonable room—too tight and you'll get hunted. Consider entering on retest instead of breakout. Accept that some fakeouts will catch you—no method is perfect. Size appropriately so single losses don't hurt.
How does Thrive help with breakout trading?
Thrive alerts you when price approaches key levels on your watchlist. Volume spike alerts notify you of potential breakout conditions. The journal tracks your breakout trade performance, showing your success rate and helping you identify which breakout setups work best for you.