blog · ~6 min read

Elliott Wave in Multi-Timeframe Analysis

Elliott Wave is fractal by design — multi-timeframe analysis aligns wave counts from monthly to hourly charts for high-conviction trades.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#elliott-wave#wave-theory
Эта статья на английском. Открыть на вашем языке? Google Translate →

Интерактивные инструменты могут не работать в переведённом виде.

Elliott Wave in Multi-Timeframe Analysis

Elliott Wave is fractal: every wave is built from smaller waves and is itself part of a larger wave. Multi-timeframe (MTF) analysis is therefore not optional — it is the natural operating mode of the theory. Aligning counts across timeframes is where the real edge lives.

The fractal principle in practice

A wave labeled on a weekly chart is composed of waves on the daily chart, which are composed of waves on the 4-hour chart, and so on. When all timeframes point in the same direction, you have a fractal alignment — the highest-conviction setup Elliott Wave can offer.

The top-down method

Always start at the highest timeframe and work down:

  1. Monthly / Weekly: identify the largest visible cycle. Are we in wave 3, 4, or 5 of a Primary or Cycle degree impulse? This sets your directional bias for months ahead.
  2. Daily: identify the Intermediate degree waves within the current Primary wave. This defines swing-trade bias.
  3. 4-hour: identify the Minor degree waves within the current Intermediate wave. This refines entries and exits.
  4. 1-hour: identify Minute degree waves for execution timing — pinpointing the end of a wave 2 or wave 4.

Working bottom-up (starting at 1-hour and guessing the monthly structure) leads to constant miscounts and whipsaw.

The alignment test

A trade qualifies as high-conviction when:

  • The weekly chart shows the market in wave 3 (or wave 5) of an uptrend
  • The daily chart shows the market in wave (3) of wave 3
  • The 4-hour chart shows the market in wave iii of wave (3)
  • The 1-hour chart shows the start of wave iii after a clean wave ii retracement

This "wave 3 of 3 of 3 of 3" alignment is the strongest directional setup in the entire theory. Trades taken here typically have the best risk/reward of any Elliott setup.

Handling conflicting timeframes

Timeframes often conflict — the weekly is in wave 4 while the daily is in wave 3 of an internal correction. Resolution rules:

  • Larger degree wins: if the weekly says wave 4 (sideways correction), treat the daily wave 3 as a counter-trend bounce within that correction — do not position for a new uptrend
  • Wait for smaller-degree confirmation: smaller timeframes resolve faster. Let the 4-hour count confirm the daily count before committing
  • Use the larger degree for bias, smaller degree for entry: weekly = hold or stand aside; daily = swing bias; 4-hour = entry and stop placement

Common MTF mistakes

  • Counting waves on one timeframe only — ignoring the larger structure leads to calling a wave 5 when you are actually mid-way through wave 3 of a larger move
  • Switching timeframes to fit a bias — cherry-picking the timeframe that agrees with your desired trade direction
  • Overcounting intraday noise — sub-minuette counts on 1-minute charts are unreliable; cap your finest analysis at 15-minute or 1-hour
  • Ignoring degree labels — using "wave 3" on every timeframe without specifying the degree (Cycle, Primary, Intermediate, etc.)

Practical workflow

  1. Open the weekly chart. Label the largest visible structure. Note the current wave position.
  2. Drop to daily. Label Intermediate waves within the current Primary wave.
  3. Drop to 4-hour. Identify Minor waves within the current Intermediate wave.
  4. Plan the trade: bias from weekly, swing direction from daily, entry from 4-hour, execution from 1-hour.
  5. Recheck alignment after each major swing. Wave counts evolve — update them as the market provides new information.

Timeframe rotation

As waves complete on smaller timeframes, the larger timeframe's count updates. A daily wave (5) completion may promote the weekly wave from (4) to (5). This rotation upward is the mechanism by which smaller-degree analysis refines larger-degree counts.

Summary

Elliott Wave without multi-timeframe analysis is half a tool. Start at the top, work down, look for fractal alignment, and let the larger degree define your bias while the smaller degree times your entry. Conflicting timeframes are a signal to wait — not to force a trade.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

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