Candlestick PatternsGravestone Doji
Candlestick Patterns

Gravestone DojiPattern

"Master the Bearish Reversal (context-dependent) signal that outlines a critical shift in market sentiment."

Definition

The Gravestone Doji Candlestick Pattern is a single-candle pattern where the open, low, and close prices are nearly the same, while the candle has a long upper shadow and little to no lower shadow.

In Simple Words

"The market moved sharply upward during the session, but sellers pushed the price all the way back down before the close. This pattern reflects clear rejection of higher prices."

Core Message

  • Buyers attempted to push prices higher but failed.
  • Sellers regained control before the close.
  • Higher prices were tested and rejected.

Visual Interpretation

Let’s break the candle visually and logically.

1

Open ≈ Close ≈ Low

Sellers managed to close price at the session low.

2

Very Long Upper Wick

Buyers pushed consistently higher, but failed to hold.

3

No/Negligible Lower Wick

Price never really went below the open until the very end.

4

Extremely Small Real Body

Total collapse of the rally.

"The candle resembles a "gravestone," symbolizing a failed rally."

Market Psychology

1

Context

Market is usually in an uptrend

Buyer confidence is high

2

Rally

Buyers push price aggressively higher

Breakout traders enter

Selling pressure increases at highs

3

Rejection

Sellers overpower buyers

Price closes near the session low

Buyer confidence weakens

"The market shifts from total fear (Phase 1) to confident realization (Phase 4) in a single session."

Technical Identification

Pattern Formation Rules

Opening price ≈ Closing price ≈ Low

Why? Defines the Gravestone structure.

Real body is almost non-existent

Why? Doji characteristic.

Upper shadow is very long

Why? Rejection of highs.

Lower shadow is absent or extremely small

Why? No buying pressure at lows.

Appears after an uptrend

Why? Reversal context.

Strict Rule: If visual conditions are not met, the pattern is invalid.

Ideal Market Conditions

Gravestone Doji works best when:

  • After a strong uptrend or extended rally
  • Near resistance levels or supply zones
  • Near prior swing highs
  • During buying exhaustion
  • On higher timeframes (Daily, Weekly)

"Weak context: Middle of a sideways range or low-volume environments."

Signal Verification

Confirmation

Are sellers willing to continue defending higher prices?

  • A bearish candle following the Gravestone Doji
  • Failure of price to move above the Doji high
  • Alignment with resistance zones
Warning

Without confirmation: Rejection matters only when it happens at the right place.

Failure Conditions

  • It appears without a prior rally
  • The next candle breaks above the Doji high
  • The broader trend remains strongly bullish
  • It forms near support instead of resistance
Truth: The Gravestone Doji shows buyer failure at higher prices, not certainty of decline.

Common Misconceptions

"Gravestone Doji guarantees a market top"

It signals failure at highs, not a crash.

"Any long upper wick candle is a Gravestone Doji"

Open/Close must be at the LOW.

"No confirmation is required"

It highlights weakness, confirmation is critical.

Final Explanation in One Line

"A Gravestone Doji does not say "price will fall." It says "buyers tried to push price higher — and failed." Understanding where this failure occurs is the real lesson."

Quick Facts

Difficulty
Intermediate
Category
Candlestick Pattern
Type
Single

Who Should Use This

Beginners

Learn how rejection at higher levels appears on charts.

Intermediate

Combine with resistance and follow-through analysis.

Advanced

Use as contextual evidence of supply, not a standalone trigger.

Video Coming Soon

Detailed video breakdown is in production.

Save to Diary

Save Gravestone Doji to your personal collection for quick reference.

Advanced Course

Detailed walkthrough coming soon

In Production

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Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer: While due care has been taken to ensure the accuracy, clarity, and relevance of the information, the content is intended solely for educational purposes. Financial terms and concepts are interpretative tools; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This content does not constitute financial, investment, or advisory recommendations of any kind.

Published: Feb 2026Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer:While due care is taken to ensure the accuracy and clarity of information provided, the sheer complexity of data arrangements may lead to unintentional discrepancies. This content is for educational purposes only. Financial markets involve significant risk; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This does not constitute financial or investment advice.