blog · ~6 min read

Building a Complete Market Structure Trading Framework

A complete market structure framework combines trend, key levels, liquidity, order blocks, and execution into one coherent system — this guide walks through building it from the ground up.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#market-structure#smart-money
この記事は英語です。あなたの言語で表示しますか? Google Translate →

翻訳ビューではインタラクティブツールが動作しない場合があります。

Building a Complete Market Structure Trading Framework

Individual concepts — BOS, CHoCH, order blocks, liquidity, FVGs — are powerful but fragmented. The real edge comes from assembling them into a single coherent framework that tells you what to do at every moment. This guide walks through building a complete market structure trading framework from the ground up.

The framework's purpose

A framework answers four questions, in order:

  1. Where is the market? (phase and trend)
  2. Where is the liquidity? (zones where price will react)
  3. What is the setup? (the specific trade trigger)
  4. How do I execute? (entry, stop, target, size)

Every trade decision should follow this sequence. Skipping steps leads to impulsive trades that don't fit your edge.

Step 1: Identify the market phase and trend

Start at the highest timeframe. Define:

  • Phase: trend, range, or transition?
  • Trend direction: HH/HL (up), LH/LL (down), or sideways (range)
  • Key swing points: the most recent swing high and swing low that define the structure

This sets your bias. If the daily is in an uptrend making HH/HL, you're looking for longs. You don't fight the HTF trend unless structure breaks.

Step 2: Mark key levels and liquidity zones

On the HTF, identify:

  • Major support and resistance: levels that have clearly mattered
  • Order blocks: the last opposing candles before strong moves
  • Equal highs and equal lows: liquidity pools where stops cluster
  • Fair value gaps: imbalance zones price may return to
  • Major swing highs and lows: obvious targets and invalidation points

These are your zones of interest. Price returning to one of these zones is where setups form.

Step 3: Wait for price to reach a zone

Patience. Most of the time, price is in transit between zones — not at a zone. Stand aside. Wait for price to reach a HTF level, an order block, or a liquidity pool. Only when price is at a zone do you start looking for setups.

If price is in the middle of nowhere, do nothing.

Step 4: Identify the setup

When price reaches a zone, look for one of these setup patterns:

  • Liquidity sweep: price pokes beyond the zone (wick) and reverses
  • Order block reaction: price reacts at the order block zone
  • FVG fill: price retraces into an FVG and reacts
  • CHoCH: structure breaks against the prior trend at the zone
  • BOS confirmation: structure breaks in the trend direction after a pullback to the zone

Each setup has its own confirmation rules. Wait for confirmation — don't predict.

Step 5: Drop to a lower timeframe for entry

Once a HTF setup forms, drop to a lower timeframe for the entry:

  1. Look for a CHoCH or BOS on the LTF in your direction
  2. Wait for an order block or FVG on the LTF to form
  3. Enter on the LTF reaction, with stop beyond the LTF structure

This gives you a tight stop relative to the HTF target — high reward-to-risk.

Step 6: Define risk and target

  • Stop: beyond the LTF structure that triggered your entry (or beyond the HTF zone if entering on the HTF)
  • Target: the next HTF liquidity pool or structure level
  • Reward-to-risk: target distance ÷ stop distance — must be at least 2:1
  • Position size: dollar risk ÷ stop distance

If the target doesn't give 2:1, skip the trade. The math has to work.

Step 7: Manage the trade

  • Don't move the stop away from price: ever
  • Move to break-even only after price has moved meaningfully: typically 1R or more
  • Exit if the thesis breaks: if the structure that gave you the trade breaks, exit even if the stop hasn't been hit
  • Take partials at logical levels: scale out at HTF targets, let runners go

Step 8: Journal and review

After every trade (win or lose):

  • Setup type, entry, stop, target, outcome
  • Did I follow the framework?
  • What did this trade teach me?
  • What patterns am I seeing across recent trades?

Review weekly. Your framework should evolve based on what your journal reveals.

The complete framework checklist

Before entering, confirm:

  • HTF trend is in my trade direction
  • Price is at a HTF zone (level, OB, FVG, or liquidity pool)
  • A clear setup has formed (sweep, CHoCH, BOS, OB reaction)
  • LTF gives a confirmed entry trigger
  • Stop is beyond structural invalidation
  • Target gives at least 2:1 RR
  • Position size keeps dollar risk within budget
  • No major news in the next hour
  • I am emotionally calm and following the plan

If any box fails, stand aside.

Common framework mistakes

  • Skipping the HTF step: trading LTF setups without HTF context
  • Predicting instead of waiting: entering before confirmation
  • Forcing trades in dead zones: when price isn't at a level
  • Ignoring the journal: a framework you don't review doesn't improve
  • Over-complicating: adding more concepts than you can track in real time

The takeaway

A market structure framework turns fragmented concepts into a system. The HTF tells you what to do; the zones tell you where to look; the setup tells you when to act; the LTF tells you how to enter. Build the framework, follow it on every trade, and review relentlessly. The edge isn't in any single concept — it's in the disciplined combination of all of them.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

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