Three Elliott Wave Rules You Must Never Break
Elliott Wave rests on three non-negotiable rules — break any one and your entire wave count must be redrawn from scratch.
As ferramentas interativas podem não funcionar na vista traduzida.
Three Elliott Wave Rules You Must Never Break
Elliott Wave has countless guidelines — alternation, equality, channeling, Fibonacci relationships — but only three hard rules. Violate any of them and your wave count is automatically wrong, no matter how elegant it looks. These rules separate a valid impulse from a mislabeled correction.
Why rules matter more than guidelines
Guidelines describe what usually happens; rules describe what must happen. A guideline can fail in unusual markets, but a broken rule means the structure you're looking at is something else entirely. Treating rules as negotiable is the single fastest way to lose money with Elliott Wave.
Rule 1: Wave 2 never retraces 100% of wave 1
In an impulse, wave 2 is a correction of wave 1. It must end before the start of wave 1. If wave 2 falls to or below wave 1's origin (in an uptrend), the structure is not an impulse — it is a correction of a larger move, and wave 1 should be relabeled as part of an ongoing decline.
Practical check: draw a horizontal line at the start of wave 1. If wave 2 touches it, your count is invalidated. Most valid wave 2s retrace between 50% and 61.8%, but the absolute ceiling is 99.9%.
Rule 2: Wave 3 is never the shortest of waves 1, 3, and 5
Wave 3 must be either the longest of the three motive waves, or the middle one in length — but never the shortest. This rule reflects the psychological reality that the middle wave is when the crowd finally agrees on direction, producing the most powerful move.
Practical check: compare the price lengths of waves 1, 3, and 5. If wave 3 is shorter than both wave 1 and wave 5, your count is invalid. A common mistake is forcing a wave 3 label onto a short, choppy move and then claiming wave 5 "extended" — usually the structure is actually a corrective ABC.
Rule 3: Wave 4 never enters the price territory of wave 1
In an uptrend, the low of wave 4 must remain above the high of wave 1. If wave 4 overlaps into wave 1's price range, you are not looking at an impulse — you are almost certainly looking at a diagonal (a triangular pattern with overlapping waves) or a correction.
Practical check: identify the extreme of wave 1 (its high in an uptrend). The low of wave 4 must stay above that level. This is the most frequently violated rule in beginner counts because markets often produce shallow overlaps that look like clean pullbacks.
What happens when a rule breaks
When any rule breaks:
- Stop. Don't rationalize the count.
- Relabel. The likely alternative is usually a corrective structure — flat, zigzag, or triangle — being mistaken for an impulse.
- Re-derive. Work from the next larger degree down to find the correct placement.
Rules + the impulse checklist
A valid impulse must satisfy:
- Five labeled waves in the trend direction
- All three rules above intact
- Each motive sub-wave itself a five-wave structure
- Each corrective sub-wave a three-wave structure
Master these three rules first. They are the spine of every wave count you will ever build — and the most common reason counts fail in practice.
Live Chart
Open full chart →Related market data, powered by TradingView.