BOS and CHoCH in Smart Money Concepts
Break of Structure confirms a trend, while Change of Character warns it may be ending, and reading both correctly keeps you on the right side of the move.
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BOS and CHoCH in Smart Money Concepts
Two acronyms sit at the heart of SMC structure reading: BOS (Break of Structure) and CHoCH (Change of Character). Together they tell you whether a trend is continuing or cracking.
The building block: market structure
Before BOS or CHoCH means anything, you need to read structure correctly:
- Uptrend: sequence of higher highs (HH) and higher lows (HL)
- Downtrend: sequence of lower highs (LH) and lower lows (LL)
- Range: a mix with no clear sequence
The last swing high and last swing low define the current "structure." A break of either is the signal SMC traders watch.
Break of Structure (BOS)
A BOS happens when price closes beyond the most recent swing high (in an uptrend) or swing low (in a downtrend). It confirms the existing trend is still in control.
- Bullish BOS: price breaks above the prior swing high — uptrend intact
- Bearish BOS: price breaks below the prior swing low — downtrend intact
A BOS is a continuation signal. Traders use it to confirm a trend is live before looking for entries on pullbacks. A trend without clean BOS sequences is suspect — it may be a range or a weakening move.
Change of Character (CHoCH)
A CHoCH is the first opposite break — the moment the structure stops respecting the trend. In an uptrend, a CHoCH is price breaking below the last higher low. In a downtrend, it is price breaking above the last lower high.
- Bullish CHoCH: in a downtrend, price breaks above the last lower high — bears losing control
- Bearish CHoCH: in an uptrend, price breaks below the last higher low — bulls losing control
A CHoCH is a warning, not a confirmation. It tells you the prior trend may be exhausted. The follow-through — a new BOS in the opposite direction — is what confirms the reversal.
The BOS → CHoCH → BOS sequence
Reversals in SMC often follow a predictable rhythm:
- Trend pushes to a new extreme (a BOS in the trend direction)
- A sweep of liquidity occurs at that extreme
- Price reverses and breaks the last minor structure in the trend direction (a CHoCH)
- A pullback forms
- Price breaks the new structure in the opposite direction (a BOS confirms the reversal)
This sequence — sweep, CHoCH, pullback, BOS — is the bread and butter of SMC reversal entries. The CHoCH is your early warning; the BOS in the new direction is your confirmation.
Trading with structure
- Trend continuation: wait for a BOS, then enter on a pullback to an order block or FVG
- Reversal entries: wait for a sweep + CHoCH, then enter on the lower-timeframe BOS in the new direction
- Invalidation: if a CHoCH does not lead to a confirming BOS, the original trend likely resumes
Common mistakes
- Treating every wick break as a BOS: use closes, not just wicks, to confirm structural breaks
- Calling a CHoCH a reversal: a CHoCH alone is not a reversal — wait for confirming structure
- Ignoring timeframe: a CHoCH on the 5-minute is noise on the daily. Always anchor to your higher timeframe.
BOS and CHoCH are the skeleton of SMC. Every other concept — order blocks, FVGs, sweeps — hangs off this structure. Get this right, and the rest of the framework falls into place.
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