📈 CHART PATTERNS

Break of Structure & Change of Character

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Break of Structure (BOS) and Change of Character (CHoCH) are SMC’s framework for describing what a trend is doing in real time. BOS confirms continuation; CHoCH signals reversal. Together they give a structural language for reading whether a market is still trending or has just shifted.

Both rely on the same primitives: swing highs and swing lows. An uptrend prints higher highs and higher lows; a downtrend prints lower highs and lower lows. BOS happens when the trend confirms itself by breaking the next expected level. CHoCH happens when the trend breaks against itself for the first time.

Break of Structure (BOS)

Prior High BOS

In an uptrend, BOS happens when price prints a new higher high — breaking above the previous swing high. This confirms the trend is intact and continuing. The break is the structural signal that the path of least resistance remains upward.

In a downtrend, BOS is the mirror: price prints a new lower low, breaking below the previous swing low. The downtrend has confirmed itself.

BOS is a continuation signal. It does not predict the next move — it confirms the current move is still operating. Traders use it to validate that they should remain biased in the trend’s direction.

Change of Character (CHoCH)

Last Higher Low CHoCH

CHoCH happens when an uptrend prints a new lower low for the first time — breaking below the last higher low instead of above the last higher high. This is the first structural signal that the uptrend has lost integrity. The character of the market has changed: it is no longer reliably making higher highs and higher lows; it has done something the trend is not supposed to do.

In a downtrend, CHoCH is the mirror: price prints a higher high, breaking above the last lower high. The downtrend has lost its structural integrity.

CHoCH is a reversal signal. It is the earliest structural indication that the trend may be ending. It does not guarantee the reversal will continue — markets can print one CHoCH and then resume the original trend — but it is the first warning the structure gives you.

What it tells you

BOS and CHoCH together provide a binary classification of every break: is the trend continuing (BOS) or is it changing (CHoCH)? Read in sequence, they give a running narrative of market state. A series of BOSes in the same direction confirms a strong trend. A CHoCH followed by BOSes in the opposite direction confirms a new trend.

The honest skeptical view: BOS and CHoCH are restatements of classic Dow Theory (higher highs / higher lows define an uptrend) with new branding. The underlying concept is sound and has been used for over a century. The new vocabulary is sometimes useful for precision, sometimes for marketing. Either way, the underlying structural reading is what matters, not the labels.

One caveat worth knowing: identifying swing highs and lows depends on the timeframe and on how you define a swing. Different traders looking at the same chart can identify different swing points and therefore call different bars BOS or CHoCH. The framework is more rigorous than freehand trend-line drawing but less rigorous than mathematical indicators. Treat it as a structured way of reading price, not as a deterministic signal generator.

How to trade it

1
Define your swings. Use a consistent rule for what counts as a swing high or low — e.g. a bar with higher highs on both sides for a swing high. Pick the rule and stick with it; do not adjust per chart.
2
Identify the current trend. Look at the last few swing points. If higher highs and higher lows, the trend is up. If lower highs and lower lows, down. If neither, the market is in transition and structural reading is less reliable.
3
Use BOS as confirmation, not entry. A new higher high in an uptrend confirms continuation, but entering on the break itself often catches the top of a small move. Better: wait for a pullback to the broken level (now support) and enter there.
4
Use CHoCH as a warning to flatten or reverse. A CHoCH against your existing trend position is a structural sign to reduce or exit. A CHoCH followed by an opposite-direction setup (OB, FVG, sweep) is a higher-probability entry than just trading the CHoCH alone.
5
Stop on a counter-CHoCH. If you entered on a CHoCH in one direction, your invalidation is a CHoCH back in the other direction. The structure that triggered you is also what stops you out.
6
Target the next structural level. Previous swing high (in a new uptrend) or low (in a new downtrend). Define it before entry. Use R-multiples to size and stop, not pip distances picked from the chart.
Entry
Retest of broken level (BOS) or setup after CHoCH
Stop
Counter-CHoCH or beyond the swing extreme
Target
Next structural high / low

Key insight: BOS and CHoCH are most reliable on higher timeframes (4H, daily) where the swings are well-defined. On lower timeframes (5m, 15m), the same structural reading produces many more false signals because the swings are noisier. Use the higher timeframe to set the bias; use the lower timeframe to find entries within that bias.

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