Strong vs Weak Supply/Demand Zones
Not all supply and demand zones are equal, and learning to rank them by strength lets you focus on high-probability setups and ignore the rest.
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Strong vs Weak Supply/Demand Zones
A common mistake in zone trading is treating every marked zone as equal. They are not. A strong zone reacts cleanly and holds; a weak zone gets sliced through without a pause. Learning to rank zones by strength is what separates consistent zone traders from frustrated ones.
What makes a zone strong
Strong supply and demand zones share these traits:
1. Sharp departure
The move away from the base is fast and imbalanced. Price leaves the zone with large, consecutive candles, often leaving gaps. A slow, drifting departure suggests weak institutional involvement.
2. Fresh (untested)
Price has not returned to the zone since it formed. Fresh zones carry the highest probability because the orders that fueled the move are still resting there. Each retest weakens a zone.
3. Broke structure
The departure broke the most recent swing high (for demand) or swing low (for supply). If the move did not even break structure, the institutional commitment is questionable.
4. Higher-timeframe alignment
The zone aligns with the HTF trend. A demand zone in a daily uptrend is strong. A demand zone in a daily downtrend is weak — it is fighting the tide.
5. Logical location
Strong demand zones sit in discount territory (lower third of a range). Strong supply zones sit in premium territory (upper third). Zones in the middle of the range — at equilibrium — are weaker.
What makes a zone weak
Flip the criteria, and you have the warning signs:
- Slow departure: price drifted away gradually, with no impulse
- Tested multiple times: the zone has been revisited and absorbed
- No structure break: the move failed to break recent highs or lows
- Against the HTF trend: a demand zone fighting a daily downtrend
- In no-man's land: sitting at equilibrium with no clear premium or discount context
Weak zones are not always useless, but they require more confirmation and offer lower probability. Skip them unless everything else aligns perfectly.
The strength ranking
A practical way to rank zones:
A-grade zone (highest probability):
- Sharp departure + fresh + broke structure + HTF aligned + in discount/premium
B-grade zone:
- Most criteria met, but missing one (e.g., slightly tested, or departure was strong but not extreme)
C-grade zone (low probability):
- Slow departure, multiple tests, or against HTF trend
Only trade A and B grades. Downgrade C grades to "watch only" or remove them entirely.
How strength affects your trading
- Entry aggression: A-grade zones can be traded with limit orders at the zone edge. B-grade zones require confirmation before entry.
- Stop placement: stronger zones allow tighter stops (just beyond the zone). Weaker zones need wider stops or no trade at all.
- Position sizing: some traders size up on A-grade zones and down on B-grade. Never size up on weak zones.
- Targets: strong zones often produce full reversals to the next liquidity pool. Weak zones often produce only small bounces.
A warning on overconfidence
Even A-grade zones fail. A strong demand zone can break if a larger-timeframe supply zone is sitting above it, or if news hits. Strength raises probability; it does not guarantee outcome. Always use stops.
How to use the ranking
- Mark all zones on your chart
- Apply the strength criteria to each
- Label them A, B, or C
- Trade only A and B grades, with appropriate confirmation
- Remove C grades or keep them on watch only
This simple ranking discipline eliminates the majority of low-quality trades. You stop forcing setups and start waiting for the zones that actually deserve your risk.
The takeaway
Strong zones are easy to spot once you know the criteria: sharp departure, fresh, broke structure, HTF aligned, in a logical location. Weak zones violate one or more of these. Rank every zone before you trade it, and your hit rate will rise — not because the market changed, but because you stopped trading the garbage.
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