3 Candle Reversal (3CR) is a compact price‑action pattern that captures a shift from continuation to reversal in just three candles. It looks simple, yet when applied with confirmation and risk discipline it becomes a reliable tool for intraday and swing traders alike. You do not need long‑term charts to use it; the logic holds from higher timeframes down to the M1 chart, where execution can be precise with small, well‑defined stops.
Structure of the 3CR
The pattern unfolds in three steps:
- Candle 1: a strong close in the prevailing trend direction (shows existing momentum).
- Candle 2: a pause or weak move against the trend (momentum hesitates).
- Candle 3: a decisive close against the original trend (confirms the turn).
This sequence compresses the story of exhaustion, hesitation, and takeover. The edge does not come from guessing that a third candle will print, but from waiting until it closes and confirms control has changed.
Reading momentum and context
3CR is more than a visual pattern; it is a context filter. Candle 1 tells you where energy was concentrated. Candle 2 reveals that energy fading or being challenged. Candle 3 proves acceptance in the new direction. Grade momentum by the quality of closes and wicks: impulsive bodies with follow‑through suggest strength; overlapping bodies with long opposite wicks suggest fatigue. A 3CR that forms at a meaningful level—prior swing, session high/low, ADR extreme, or higher‑timeframe zone—carries far more weight than one in the middle of nowhere.
Confirmation first: “no close, no signal”
Anticipating Candle 3 is the fastest way to turn a good idea into an avoidable loss. Require the third candle to finish. Without a closing print, there is no confirmation that participants accepted the new price area. On lower timeframes, use the exact close of Candle 3 or a small retrace entry if the structure remains intact; either way, confirmation precedes risk.
Execution on M1–H1
The 3CR logic is timeframe‑agnostic. On M15–H1 it marks clean swing turns; on M1 it pinpoints micro‑reversals with tight stops. The smaller the timeframe, the more you need structure to avoid noise. A practical approach: mark H4/H1 zones, monitor M15/M5 for developing 3CRs near those zones, and execute on M5/M1 once Candle 3 closes. This top‑down flow aligns location, story, and timing.
Stops, targets, and position sizing
- Stop placement: beyond the extreme wick of the 3CR sequence (the invalidation point). Stops are technical, never arbitrary.
- Risk per trade: 0.25–1.00% of equity, reduced when recovering from drawdown.
- Targets: logical areas such as opposing structure, session midlines, VWAP/ADR bands, or measured risk multiples (≥ 1:2).
Size the position from the stop distance—risk is the input, lot size the output. This single habit turns a pattern into a repeatable process.
Confluence that strengthens 3CR
- Levels: prior highs/lows, daily open, weekly open, round numbers.
- Trend tools: moving averages (e.g., EMA 50/120) acting as dynamic support/resistance.
- Session context: London open drives the initial move; New York overlap provides decisive closes.
- Volatility: ADR extremes or range expansions add conviction to a reversal signal.
Common mistakes and fixes
- Front‑running Candle 3: wait for the close; if missed, there will be a next setup.
- Trading every 3‑bar wiggle: demand location at a meaningful level.
- Ignoring momentum quality: grade Candle 3—does it close beyond prior bodies/wicks or just poke?
- Moving stops emotionally: define invalidation beforehand; adjust only if structure objectively shifts.
Playbook examples
Bearish 3CR in an uptrend. After a strong green Candle 1, a small red Candle 2 prints. Candle 3 closes decisively red below Candle 1’s midpoint at a prior daily high. Entry on the close or a minor pullback. Stop above the 3CR high; target the nearest demand or a 1:2 multiple. The story: buyers exhausted into resistance and sellers took control.
Bullish 3CR in a downtrend. Candle 1 is strong red into a weekly low. Candle 2 is a small green pause. Candle 3 closes firmly green back above the broken level. Entry after the close; stop below the 3CR low; target prior supply or ADR midpoint. The story: shorts trapped beneath support fuel the reversal.
Routine and record‑keeping
Treat 3CR as a process, not a prediction. Before each session, mark two A+ locations where a confirmed 3CR would deserve risk. During London–NY overlap, wait for completion. After the trade, log screenshot, entry, exit, and a one‑line lesson. Review weekly: keep what works, fix what is close, remove what fails. Consistency compounds when the routine is boring by design.
Conclusion
3 Candle Reversal distills a major shift into three prints: momentum, hesitation, takeover. It is powerful because it demands confirmation and provides a clear invalidation. Used with strict risk and location, it turns market noise into structured opportunity—from higher timeframes down to M1. Wait for Candle 3 to close, align with context, keep risk small, and let repetition do the heavy lifting.