Multi-Timeframe Screen Layout: A Three-Grid Design
A three-grid screen layout with fixed timeframe ratios, indicator consistency, and a top-down decision flow turns multi-timeframe analysis from a tab-switching chore into a single-glance read.
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Multi-Timeframe Screen Layout: A Three-Grid Design
Most multi-timeframe analysis is two charts on two tabs, switched between under pressure. A fixed three-grid layout puts the decision in one glance and removes the cost of rebuilding context every time you switch.
Multi-timeframe analysis fails not because the concept is wrong but because the layout is. Switching tabs reloads context and encourages each timeframe to be read in isolation. A fixed three-grid layout — same ratios, same indicators, same positions every session — turns the analysis into a single picture and the decision into a top-down flow.
The grid structure
Three charts stacked vertically, top to bottom:
- Grid 1 (top): higher timeframe (HTF) — direction and structure.
- Grid 2 (middle): trading timeframe (TTF) — setups and entries.
- Grid 3 (bottom): lower timeframe (LTF) — execution and stops.
Each grid occupies roughly one-third of screen height. Same width. Same zoom level in price-to-bar ratio. Same indicator stack on all three (consistency is the point).
The timeframe ratio
Use a fixed 1:4:16 ratio between the three grids:
- Swing trader: weekly / daily / 4-hour.
- Day trader: daily / 4-hour / 1-hour.
- Scalper: 4-hour / 1-hour / 15-minute.
Avoid 1:2:4 ratios — the timeframes overlap and produce false confirmation because the same price action appears on multiple grids. The 1:4 ratio ensures each higher grid holds approximately four bars of the grid below.
The indicator stack
Identical on all three grids, to allow direct comparison:
- 20 and 50 EMA: trend direction and slope.
- ATR(14) as an overlay label (not a sub-panel): risk reference.
- Volume with 30-bar average: effort reference.
- One oscillator (RSI 14): momentum alignment.
Do not add a second oscillator or sub-panel indicator. The consistency is what makes the three grids comparable; clutter destroys the comparison.
The top-down decision flow
Read the grids in order, top to bottom, and let each grid's verdict gate the next:
- Grid 1 (HTF): is the trend up, down, or flat? Only take TTF setups in the HTF direction. If HTF is flat, only take range setups.
- Grid 2 (TTF): is there a setup in the HTF direction? A pullback to the 20-EMA, a harmonic completion, a VSA signal. If no setup, stand aside.
- Grid 3 (LTF): does the LTF confirm the TTF setup within four bars? A reversal bar on volume above its V30. If no confirmation, do not enter.
Each grid answers one question and gates the next. The decision is a three-step filter, not three independent reads.
The workspaces per style
Pre-build workspaces for each style and switch between them, not between timeframes within a workspace: swing (weekly/daily/4-hour), day (daily/4-hour/1-hour), scalp (4-hour/1-hour/15-minute). Mixing timeframes within one workspace breaks the ratio and produces meaningless confirmation.
The annotation convention
Annotate identically across grids: HTF gets horizontal lines for major support/resistance and trend labels; TTF gets Fibonacci retracements, supply/demand zones, harmonic pattern labels; LTF gets entry trigger arrows, stop and target levels only. Do not annotate the HTF with TTF-level detail — the grids lose their distinct roles and the comparison collapses.
Common errors
- Different indicators per grid: makes comparison impossible. The stack must be identical.
- HTF too close to TTF (e.g., 1-hour / 30-minute / 15-minute): false confirmation. Use the 1:4 ratio.
- Reading grids bottom-up: LTF-first reading biases the decision toward noise. Always read top-down.
- Adding a fourth grid: three is the limit. A fourth splits attention and produces analysis paralysis.
The layout is the system. Build it once, use it every session, and multi-timeframe analysis stops being a chore and becomes a glance.
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