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Fibonacci Clusters and Confluence Zones

Fibonacci clusters form when multiple retracements, extensions, or projections from different swings converge at a single price, creating high-probability reversal or target zones.

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Fibonacci Clusters and Confluence Zones

One Fibonacci level is a hint. Three stacked on the same price is a signal.

A single Fibonacci level is often no more reliable than a random price. But when retracements, extensions, and projections from different swings converge at the same price, they form a cluster — a confluence zone where the market is statistically more likely to react. Clusters are where Fibonacci analysis earns its keep.

What a cluster is

A Fibonacci cluster is a tight band of prices where multiple Fibonacci measurements overlap. These measurements may come from:

  • Different retracement swings.
  • Different extension projections.
  • Different timeframes.
  • Retracements and extensions on the same swing.

The more independent measurements that converge, the stronger the cluster.

How to build a cluster

  1. Identify three or more significant swings on the chart.
  2. Apply Fibonacci retracements to each.
  3. Apply Fibonacci extensions to completed swings.
  4. Look for prices where three or more levels land within a narrow band (often 0.5% of price or tighter).

That band is the cluster. A cluster of three levels is good; four or more is high-conviction.

A worked example

Three recent swings: swing 1 (low $80, high $100) has its 0.618 retracement at $87.64; swing 2 (low $85, high $98) has its 0.786 retracement at $87.77. Those two cluster in a $0.13 band around $87.70. Add an extension projection of $87.70 and you have a three-level cluster — a high-probability reaction zone, because a convergence of three independent projections is unlikely to be random.

Confluence beyond Fibonacci

The strongest clusters add non-Fibonacci confluence:

  • A Fibonacci cluster at a prior swing high or low.
  • A Fibonacci cluster at a 200-day moving average.
  • A Fibonacci cluster at a round-number price.
  • A Fibonacci cluster at a harmonic pattern's PRZ.

Each additional confluence raises the probability of a meaningful reaction.

Trading the cluster

Entry: as price reaches the cluster, wait for a reversal bar or VSA footprint. Enter on confirmation — never on a limit order at the cluster alone.

Stop: just beyond the cluster's outer edge. The tight band of the cluster makes for a tight, well-defined stop.

Targets:

  • Target 1: the nearest prior swing extreme.
  • Target 2: the opposite side of the range.
  • Target 3: a measured-move projection.

Cluster quality checklist

  • Three or more independent Fibonacci measurements overlap.
  • The cluster band is tight (within 0.5% of price).
  • Measurements come from different, significant swings.
  • At least one non-Fibonacci confluence is present.
  • Price prints a reversal bar at the cluster.

Common mistakes

  • Forcing clusters: projecting dozens of levels until something "clusters" is noise, not analysis. Use only significant swings.
  • Ignoring the higher timeframe: a cluster on the hourly chart inside a weekly downtrend is a counter-trend bounce, not a bottom.
  • Trading the cluster blindly: clusters fail too. Always wait for confirmation.

The honest edge

Clusters do not guarantee reversals — they raise probability. A disciplined trader uses clusters as one input among several, demands confirmation, and respects stops. Done consistently, cluster trading produces a measurable edge over time, because it concentrates risk at prices where multiple independent measurements agree.


Next: Fibonacci time zones, where the sequence is applied to the time axis.

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