📈 CHART PATTERNS

Fair Value Gap

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The Fair Value Gap, or FVG, is a three-bar pattern at the centre of modern SMC and ICT methodologies. It marks a price range that was never properly traded through — left behind by a fast, decisive move. The theory says price often returns to fill these zones, and sometimes reverses from them.

There are two variants: bullish and bearish. Both follow the same mechanic, mirrored.

Bullish Fair Value Gap

FVG Bar 1 Bar 2 (displacement) Bar 3

A bullish FVG forms when the low of bar 3 is higher than the high of bar 1. The two outer bars do not overlap, and the middle bar (bar 2, the displacement bar) was strong enough to leave a gap behind it. That gap is the FVG — an unfilled price range above bar 1’s wick and below bar 3’s wick.

SMC traders treat this zone as a potential support area. Price often returns to it, taps the level, and may resume the upward move from there.

Bearish Fair Value Gap

FVG Bar 1 Bar 2 (displacement) Bar 3

A bearish FVG is the mirror. It forms when the high of bar 3 is lower than the low of bar 1. The middle bar this time is a strong red candle, displacing price down hard enough to leave a gap behind it. The zone sits below bar 1’s wick and above bar 3’s wick.

Treated as a potential resistance area. Price returning to the zone often gets rejected and the downward move resumes.

What it tells you

The displacement bar moved so fast that normal price discovery did not occur within the gap. There was an imbalance — buyers (or sellers) overwhelmed the other side, and the level was skipped rather than traded. SMC theory says the market “remembers” these unfilled zones and often returns to them.

Some traders distinguish between high-volume and low-volume FVGs. A gap created on heavy volume is treated as a stronger imbalance that holds as support or resistance. A gap created on thin volume is treated as weaker — more likely to be revisited and reversed. Both readings exist in the methodology and both have their proponents.

The honest caveat: not every FVG plays out. The pattern is common, and treating every single one as a tradeable level is the fastest way to have no edge at all. Filtering — by location, trend, volume, or confluence with other levels — is what separates traders who use the concept usefully from traders who chase every gap they see.

How to trade it

1
Identify a clean FVG. Three-bar window where the outer bars do not overlap. The displacement bar (middle) should be visibly larger than its neighbours. Prefer gaps formed at structural levels rather than in random chop.
2
Wait for price to return. The setup is not the gap itself — it is the gap being revisited. Mark the zone, wait. If price never returns within a reasonable window, there is no trade.
3
Look for confirmation at the tap. A reversal candle, a rejection wick, a clean bounce off the zone edge. Entering on the touch alone is taking a coin flip; entering on confirmation is taking a setup.
4
Enter on the confirmation close. Long on a bullish FVG when price closes back above the zone top after tapping in. Short on a bearish FVG when price closes back below the zone bottom after tapping in.
5
Stop on the far side of the gap. For bullish FVGs, below the lower edge of the zone (bar 1’s high) with a small buffer. For bearish, above the upper edge of the zone (bar 1’s low). If price closes through the entire gap, the setup has failed and the stop should trigger.
6
Target the next structure level. Previous high (bullish) or low (bearish), a higher-timeframe level, or a fixed R-multiple of your defined risk. Whatever you use, define it before entry, not after.
Entry
Close back out of the gap after a tap
Stop
Far side of the FVG zone
Target
Next structural level or R-multiple

Key insight: FVGs are not all equal. A gap formed at a major level, in the direction of the higher-timeframe trend, with a strong displacement bar, is a high-quality setup. A gap formed in the middle of consolidation, against the trend, on a marginal displacement bar, is noise. The work is filtering the second kind out, not finding more of them.

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Trading Psychology

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