A faster, more sensitive version of RSI. Applies the Stochastic formula to RSI values β making it quicker to signal turns, but also more prone to false signals in choppy markets.
Stochastic RSI takes the standard RSI and applies the Stochastic oscillator formula to it. The result is an indicator that oscillates between 0 and 1 (or 0-100) and is significantly more sensitive than regular RSI.
It has two lines: %K (the fast line β teal) and %D (a smoothed average of %K β gold dashed). Crossovers between these two lines, especially inside the overbought or oversold zones, are the primary signals.
RSI: Slower, fewer signals, fewer false positives. Better for swing trades and higher timeframes.
Stoch RSI: Faster, more signals, more false positives. Better for shorter timeframes and fine-tuning entry timing within an existing RSI signal.
Best on the 15-minute to 4-hour timeframe when looking for precise entry timing. Use regular RSI on the higher timeframe to set the bias, then Stoch RSI on the lower timeframe to pull the trigger.
Avoid using it alone β it generates too many signals in choppy markets without additional confluence.
Both lines are below 20. The %K line crosses above the %D line. This is the cleanest bullish entry signal β momentum is turning upward from deeply oversold levels. Confirm with HTF trend direction.
Both lines are above 80. The %K line crosses below the %D line. Momentum is turning downward from extended overbought levels. In a downtrend this is a high-probability short entry signal.
During a strong uptrend, Stoch RSI dipping into oversold and curling back up is a pullback-to-trend signal. The trend context makes this much more reliable than the same signal in a ranging market.
In a downtrend, if Stoch RSI only reaches 50-60 before rolling back over β failing to even reach the overbought zone β that shows the upward momentum is very weak. The bear trend is likely to continue.
Faster alternative: Change RSI Length and Stoch Length to 8 for quicker signals on scalping timeframes. More signals = more noise, so only do this with strong confluence filters.
Important: Only trade crossovers that occur inside the zones (below 20 for buys, above 80 for sells). Crossovers in the middle zone are far less reliable and generate constant noise.
Daily RSI oversold + 1H Stoch RSI crossing up from oversold = layered signal. The higher timeframe RSI sets the zone, Stoch RSI gives the precise trigger. This combo works very well on NQ pullbacks.
On the 15-minute NQ chart, an oversold Stoch RSI crossover while price is above the 21 EMA and above VWAP is a three-confluence long entry. It doesn’t happen often β but when it does, it’s high probability.
On the 5-minute Bitcoin chart, Stoch RSI oversold crossovers in the direction of the 15-minute trend are popular among scalpers. Use with volume confirmation β volume should pick up on the crossover candle.
In sideways price action, Stoch RSI will swing from oversold to overbought and back repeatedly β generating constant signals, most of which are false. Only use it when there’s a clear directional trend on a higher timeframe.
The other half is what’s happening in your head when you’re in the trade. Fear, ego, revenge trading, breaking your own stops β that’s where most accounts actually lose money. Not bad setups.
Read the Trading Psychology Guide β