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Premium and Discount Zones

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Premium and Discount Zones are an SMC concept that answers a deceptively simple question: where in the recent range should I be entering trades? The answer: long entries in the discount zone (the lower half of the range), short entries in the premium zone (the upper half). The 50% line splits the two.

The framework is borrowed from Wyckoff, repackaged for modern SMC traders. The logic is the same as buying low and selling high — but with a clear, mechanical definition of what “low” and “high” mean within the most recent move.

Drawing the zones

PREMIUM — SELL ZONEDISCOUNT — BUY ZONERANGE HIGH (100%)EQUILIBRIUM (50%)RANGE LOW (0%)PREMIUM & DISCOUNT ZONES — SPLIT BY THE 50% MIDPOINT

Three simple steps:

1. Identify the most recent significant swing. A move from low to high (bullish setup) or high to low (bearish setup). The swing should be visibly larger than the surrounding noise.

2. Mark the 50% line of that swing. Halfway between the high and the low. This is the equilibrium — the point where buyers and sellers are theoretically indifferent.

3. The half above 50% is premium; the half below is discount. That’s it. Premium is expensive; discount is cheap.

How to use the zones

The framework is direction-aware:

Bullish bias (uptrend, looking to go long): wait for price to pull back into the discount zone before entering long. Avoid chasing in premium.

Bearish bias (downtrend, looking to short): wait for price to rally into the premium zone before entering short. Avoid shorting in discount.

No bias (range): long at the lower extreme of discount, short at the upper extreme of premium — classic range trading.

The zone tells you where to enter; it does not give you the actual entry signal. Pair with a candle pattern, an order block, an FVG, or a structural level for the trigger.

Why it works

Three reasons:

R:R math. Buying in discount with the swing high as target gives you a much better risk:reward than buying in premium. The same trade idea has wildly different math depending on where you enter.

Order flow logic. Smart money fills large orders during the range’s quiet phases — at discount for buys, premium for sells — not at the obvious breakout points where retail piles in.

Behavioural protection. The framework forces patience. If price is in premium and your bias is bullish, you wait. That alone eliminates a lot of bad trades.

How to trade it

1
Identify the relevant swing first. Higher timeframe usually — the last clear leg up or down. Lower-timeframe swings are too short to be meaningful.
2
Mark 50% of that swing. Anything above is premium; below is discount. Simple measurement, often done with a Fibonacci tool set to 50% only.
3
Decide your bias. Look at structure (BoS, CHoCH), trend direction on the higher timeframe, and macro context. Bullish bias = looking to long discount. Bearish bias = looking to short premium.
4
Wait for price to pull back into your zone. Discount for longs; premium for shorts. If price never reaches the zone, there is no trade. Patience is the strategy.
5
Look for a trigger inside the zone. A rejection candle, a Fair Value Gap fill, an order block tap, a CHoCH on the lower timeframe. The zone does not give you the entry signal — the trigger does.
6
Stop beyond the swing extreme. For longs from discount, stop below the swing low. For shorts from premium, stop above the swing high. Target the opposite end of the range.
Entry
Trigger inside discount (long) or premium (short)
Stop
Beyond the swing extreme
Target
Opposite end of the swing range

What it does NOT mean

Premium/Discount is a relative concept — relative to the current swing, not to history. Bitcoin at $90K can be in “discount” relative to a recent rally even though it’s historically expensive. Premium does not mean overbought; it means “above the midpoint of the recent move.”

It also is not a buy-the-dip strategy. If the macro structure is bearish, longing discount is fighting the trend. The framework works best when used in agreement with structural bias — not against it.

Confluence — what makes the zone stronger

The zone is most powerful when it overlaps with other SMC structures:

• A discount zone that contains an Order Block = institutional level inside a cheap zone. Strongest long setup.

• A premium zone with an unfilled Fair Value Gap above current price = price likely to climb into the gap before reversing. Strongest short setup.

• A zone aligned with HTF support/resistance = doubled-up structural reason.

• A sweep of Equal Highs into premium = liquidity grab into the sell zone. Textbook short.

Key insight: Most retail traders enter trades when price is “moving” — on breakouts, on momentum candles, on the obvious signals. By definition, those entries are usually in premium for longs and discount for shorts — the worst possible price relative to the recent swing. Premium/discount is a behavioural framework that forces you to enter when nothing exciting is happening, which is when the entry math is most in your favour. The hardest trade is the one that doesn’t feel exciting at the time.

The honest small print

The 50% line is a convenience, not a magic level. The real principle is “buy lower in the range, sell higher in the range.” The mathematical 50% just gives you a clear rule to enforce that on yourself. Some traders use 38% / 61.8% (Fibonacci) instead; the framework is the same.

And the standard caveat: this is one tool in a multi-tool framework, not a strategy in itself. Zone + bias + trigger + stop + target. Drop any of those and you’re trading half a setup.

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