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Guideline of Alternation in Elliott Wave

Alternation says corrective waves 2 and 4 should differ in form, depth, and complexity — a guideline that catches traders off guard when both look the same.

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Guideline of Alternation in Elliott Wave

Of all Elliott Wave guidelines, alternation is the most useful for anticipating what wave 4 will look like before it begins. The principle is simple, but its application rewards years of observation.

The principle

Alternation states that the two corrective waves within an impulse — wave 2 and wave 4 — should differ in form, depth, and complexity. If wave 2 was a sharp, deep zigzag, wave 4 should be a shallow, sideways flat or triangle. If wave 2 was simple, wave 4 should be complex. The market, in effect, refuses to repeat itself.

Why alternation exists

Alternation reflects the behavioral reality that markets fool the maximum number of participants. If wave 2 was a sharp 61.8% retracement, traders expect wave 4 to be the same — so they position for it. The market then delivers a sideways grind that traps them, and the trend resumes from a level they didn't anticipate.

Three dimensions of alternation

1. Form alternation

  • Wave 2 zigzag → Wave 4 flat or triangle
  • Wave 2 flat → Wave 4 zigzag or triangle
  • Wave 2 simple (single ABC) → Wave 4 complex (double or triple three)

2. Depth alternation

If wave 2 retraced 61.8%, wave 4 often retraces 38.2% or less. Conversely, a shallow wave 2 (38.2%) is often followed by a deeper wave 4 (50%). This is a statistical tendency, not a rule — but it holds more often than not.

3. Time alternation

If wave 2 was quick, wave 4 is often prolonged — and vice versa. Many traders are surprised to find that wave 4 lasts longer in time than the entire preceding impulse, even when it retraces little in price. This is the "sideways grind" that wears out trend traders.

Practical application

  1. Before wave 4 begins: note the character of wave 2 (sharp? deep? simple?). Plan for the opposite.
  2. During wave 4: if it begins looking like wave 2, suspect either an early termination (it's a smaller-degree wave within a larger correction) or a different pattern forming.
  3. Anticipating wave 5: alternation helps confirm that wave 4 is complete. A complex, sideways wave 4 ending at a Fibonacci level provides stronger confidence for entering wave 5 than a wave 4 that simply retraced like wave 2 did.

Common mistake: forcing alternation

Alternation is a guideline, not a rule. Markets sometimes produce wave 2 and wave 4 that look similar — particularly in fast, news-driven moves. If you force alternation, you may mislabel a clean simple correction as a complex double-three simply because wave 2 was also simple. Always prioritize the three hard rules over alternation.

Alternation in corrections too

Alternation also applies within corrective patterns. In a flat, wave A and wave C should differ in form. In a triangle, the sub-waves alternate in complexity. In a double three, the W and Y waves typically take different shapes — one a zigzag, the other a flat.

Trading implications

  • If wave 2 was sharp and deep, expect wave 4 to test your patience with sideways action
  • Use a longer time horizon for wave 4 entries — breakout strategies often fail in sideways corrections
  • Alternation helps you avoid the trap of assuming the next correction will mirror the last

Summary

Alternation is the market's way of staying unpredictable. Embrace it as a planning tool: prepare for wave 4 to differ from wave 2, but never let it override the hard rules or confirmed structure.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

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