10 Candlestick Patterns Every Beginner Should Know
Candlestick patterns are the alphabet of price action. Learn the 10 most important patterns, what they look like, and what they signal.
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10 Candlestick Patterns Every Beginner Should Know
The alphabet of price action
Candlesticks tell a story. Each one captures the battle between buyers and sellers in a single period — the open, close, and wicks reveal who won, who lost, and who's gaining momentum. Before touching indicators, every trader should learn to read price action through candlestick patterns. Yet pattern-reliability studies show a sobering truth: the same pattern wins 60%+ of the time at a key level and loses 55% of the time mid-range. Context — not the pattern — is everything.
How to read a candle
A candlestick packs four prices into one shape: open, high, low, and close. The body spans open-to-close; the wicks (shadows) mark the period's high and low. A green/white body means close > open (bullish); a red/black body means close < open (bearish). Long wicks show rejection — price ventured there but was driven back. A long lower wick means buyers rejected lower prices; a long upper wick means sellers rejected higher prices. A long body signals conviction; a small body signals indecision.
Patterns are simply combinations of 1–3 candles whose shape reveals a shift in control. A Hammer (long lower wick, small body) shows sellers pushed price down and buyers drove it back — a potential bullish reversal. An Engulfing candle shows one side overwhelming the other in a single bar. The key idea: a pattern is a probability signal, not a guarantee. Its edge comes from appearing at the right place — at support or resistance, after a trend, with volume. A Doji in the middle of nowhere is noise; the same Doji at resistance after a 5-day rally is a warning.
The 10 core patterns
| # | Pattern | Shape | Signal | How to trade it |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Doji | Thin/no body, wicks both sides | Indecision | Wait for next candle; bearish close after uptrend = short |
| 2 | Hammer (bullish pin bar) | Small body top, long lower wick (≥2× body), bottom of downtrend | Bullish reversal | Long on close; stop below the wick low |
| 3 | Shooting Star (bearish pin bar) | Small body bottom, long upper wick (≥2× body), top of uptrend | Bearish reversal | Short on confirmation; stop above the wick high |
| 4 | Bullish Engulfing | Large green body engulfs prior red body, bottom of downtrend | Sellers → buyers | Long at close; stop below engulfing low |
| 5 | Bearish Engulfing | Large red body engulfs prior green body, top of uptrend | Buyers → sellers | Short at close; stop above engulfing high |
| 6 | Morning Star | Red → small body → large green (3-candle) | Bullish reversal | Long after 3rd close; stop below middle low |
| 7 | Evening Star | Green → small body → large red (3-candle) | Bearish reversal | Short after 3rd close; stop above middle high |
| 8 | Three White Soldiers | 3 rising green candles, each opens in prior body | Strong bullish conviction | Long after 3rd; watch for exhaustion wicks |
| 9 | Three Black Crows | 3 falling red candles, each opens in prior body | Strong bearish conviction | Short after 3rd; watch for exhaustion wicks |
| 10 | Harami | Small body inside the prior large body | Momentum pausing | Don't trade alone; wait for breakout direction |
Worked example: EUR/USD has rallied for 4 days into the 1.1000 resistance zone. On day 5 it prints a Shooting Star with a long upper wick at 1.1015 and a close at 1.0990 — sellers rejected the highs. With support & resistance confluence and a bearish pin bar, enter short at 1.0990, stop at 1.1020 (above the wick, ≈30 pips), target 1.0930 (≈60 pips, 2R). The pattern alone isn't the edge — the level is; the pattern just confirms the level held.
Pattern-trade checklist:
- Pattern appears at a key S/R level or after a trend (not mid-range)
- Higher timeframe trend agrees with the signal direction
- Wait for the pattern to close, not mid-formation
- Volume on the signal candle ≥ 20-period average
- Stop placed beyond the wick/body, risk ≤ 1%
Three candlestick mistakes
- Trading patterns in isolation. A Hammer mid-range is noise; the same Hammer at support is a signal. Fix: only act on patterns that form at a validated support/resistance level or after a clear trend.
- Entering before the candle closes. A pattern that looks perfect mid-formation often morphs into something else by the close. Fix: wait for the candle to close; the last 5 minutes are not worth the whipsaw risk.
- Using low timeframes exclusively. A 5-minute Doji is mostly noise; a daily Doji at resistance is meaningful. Fix: default to daily and 4-hour patterns; treat anything below 1-hour as confirmation only.
Advanced tips
Two upgrades sharpen pattern trading. First, confluence stacking: a Hammer at support that also sits on the 50 EMA and a Fibonacci 61.8% retracement is far stronger than a Hammer alone — each confluence roughly adds to the probability. Second, filter by volume and trend: require signal-candle volume above the 20-period average and pattern direction aligned with the higher-timeframe moving average trend; this alone removes most false signals. For a complete system, pair patterns with the price action strategy and log each pattern's win rate by location in your journal. The best traders don't memorize 100 patterns — they master 5–10 and trade them with discipline at the right levels.
Summary
Candlestick patterns are the alphabet of price action — each one reveals who won the period's buyer–seller battle. Learn these 10 core patterns, but remember the pattern is only a probability signal; the edge lives in context: a key level, a trend, and volume. Always wait for the close, place a stop beyond the wick, and confirm with the higher timeframe. Master 5–10 patterns at the right levels, not 100 in a vacuum.
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