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Wave Degrees: From Grand Supercycle to Subminuette

Elliott Wave uses nine named degrees to organize waves from centuries-long cycles down to minute intraday moves — here is the full hierarchy and how to apply it.

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Wave Degrees: From Grand Supercycle to Subminuette

Because Elliott Wave is fractal, the same five-and-three structure repeats at every scale. To keep the analysis organized, Elliott assigned names to each level of scale — called wave degrees. Nine degrees are in standard use today, codified by A.J. Frost and Robert Prechter in Elliott Wave Principle.

The nine standard degrees

From largest to smallest:

Degree Approximate duration Roman labels Typical context
Grand Supercycle Multi-century I, II, III, IV, V Secular bull/bear markets
Supercycle Multi-decade (40–70 yrs) (I) (II) (III) (IV) (V) Generational trends
Cycle Multi-year (1 to several yrs) I II III IV V Major bull/bear cycles
Primary Months to a few years (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Cyclical bull/bear phases
Intermediate Weeks to months 1 2 3 4 5 Intermediate trends
Minor Weeks (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) Swing trades
Minute Days i ii iii iv v Short-term swings
Minuette Hours (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Intraday structure
Subminuette Minutes 1 2 3 4 5 Tick-level analysis

Each degree nests inside the one above: a Primary wave 3 contains an Intermediate (1)-(2)-(3)-(4)-(5), and so on down the ladder.

Why degrees matter

Without named degrees, wave counting descends into chaos. A trader looking at a 5-minute chart might call a move "wave 3" while a monthly-chart analyst calls the same move "wave (v) of an ending diagonal." Both can be correct — they are simply operating at different degrees. Naming the degree forces you to ask: in which wave of which larger structure am I trading?

Practical application

  1. Start from the top. Begin with the highest-resolution chart you can reasonably analyze (weekly or monthly) and label the largest visible cycle. This anchors your context.
  2. Drill down. Move to the daily, then 4-hour, then hourly chart, labeling sub-waves within the larger count.
  3. Confirm alignment. A trade is highest-conviction when the smaller-degree wave aligns with the larger-degree direction — for example, buying Minor wave 3 inside Primary wave 3 inside Cycle wave 3.

The 1-2-3 rule of nesting

For any wave labeled at degree N:

  • Its motive sub-waves are labeled at degree N-1
  • Its corrective sub-waves are also at degree N-1
  • It is itself a sub-wave of degree N+1

Common mistakes

  • Mixing degrees on one chart — using Roman numerals and Arabic numerals interchangeably
  • Labeling without a larger context — counting intraday waves without first identifying the daily structure
  • Assuming the smallest degree is the only one that matters — intraday noise is real; subminuette counts are often unreliable

Realistic expectations

Retail traders rarely need anything below Minuette. Focus on Cycle through Minor for swing and position trades; reserve Minuette and Subminuette for scalpers and execution timing. The hierarchy exists to give you perspective — not to drown you in labels.

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