blog · ~6 min read

Fibonacci Extensions for Profit Targets

Fibonacci extensions project where a trending move may terminate, giving traders objective profit targets at 1.272, 1.618, and beyond without relying on guesswork.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#fibonacci#advanced
Este artículo está en inglés. ¿Verlo en tu idioma? Google Translate →

Las herramientas interactivas pueden no funcionar en la vista traducida.

Fibonacci Extensions for Profit Targets

Retracements tell you where to enter. Extensions tell you where to take profit.

Most beginners learn Fibonacci retracements for entries and then have no objective way to set profit targets. They either exit too early out of fear or too late out of greed. Fibonacci extensions solve this by projecting where a trending move is likely to terminate, based on the geometry of the prior swing.

What an extension is

A Fibonacci extension projects a price level beyond the origin of a swing, using the length of the prior leg. While a retracement measures how far price pulls back into a move, an extension measures how far price travels past the prior extreme.

The standard extension ratios are 1.272, 1.414, 1.618, 2.618, and 3.618. Of these, 1.618 is the most widely used profit target, and 1.272 is the most common conservative target.

How to draw an extension

  1. Identify a completed swing: a low (A), a high (B), and a retracement low (C).
  2. Anchor the Fibonacci tool from A to B, then drag to C.
  3. The tool projects extension levels beyond B.

The 1.272 and 1.618 levels beyond B are your primary profit targets.

A worked example

A stock swings from A=$80 to B=$100 (a $20 leg), then retraces to C=$88. Projecting extensions from the AB leg through C:

  • 1.272 extension: $88 + ($20 × 1.272) = $113.44
  • 1.618 extension: $88 + ($20 × 1.618) = $120.36

These are the levels to scale out as the new up-leg develops. The 1.272 is the conservative target; the 1.618 is the standard target.

Which extension to use?

Extension Use case
1.272 Conservative first target, shallow trends
1.414 Common in moderate trends
1.618 Standard target, the golden ratio
2.618 Strong trends, second target
3.618 Blow-off moves, rare but powerful

In weak trends, price often stalls at 1.272. In strong trends, price runs to 1.618 and beyond. Match the target to the strength of the move, not to your hope.

Scaling out strategy

A disciplined exit using extensions:

  • Close 1/3 at the 1.272 extension.
  • Move stop to break-even on the remainder.
  • Close 1/3 at the 1.618 extension.
  • Trail the final 1/3 with a moving average or exit at 2.618.

This locks in gains at the most probable reversal zones while leaving room for the larger move.

Combining with retracements

The most powerful setups combine a retracement entry with an extension target: enter long at a 0.618 retracement of the prior up-leg, target the 1.618 extension of the same leg. Risk-reward is typically 2:1 or better, and both entry and target are anchored to the same swing.

Common mistakes

  • Using the wrong swing: extensions only work from a clean, well-defined swing.
  • Ignoring trend strength: a 1.618 target in a weak, choppy trend is unrealistic.
  • Treating extensions as walls: use them as zones, not exact prices.

An extension is most reliable when it coincides with a prior swing high/low, a round number, or a harmonic completion. Two or three extensions from different swings clustering at the same price form a Fibonacci cluster — a high-conviction target.


Next: Fibonacci clusters and confluence zones, where multiple measurements stack.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk