Chart PatternsRectangle Pattern
Continuation Patterns

RectanglePattern

"A consolidation pattern that reflects temporary balance between buyers and sellers before the market resumes its next decisive move."

Definition

After a strong directional move, the market often pauses to absorb prior gains or losses. During this phase, price oscillates between horizontal support and resistance levels, forming a rectangular structure. Neither buyers nor sellers are able to gain control immediately. Once one side overpowers the other, price exits the range, continuing in the direction of the breakout.

Simple Explanation

"The market moves sideways in a box. It bounces between a floor and a ceiling. Eventually, it breaks out of the box and continues moving."

Core Message

  • The market is in temporary balance
  • Sideways movement represents consolidation, not indecision
  • Support and resistance levels are clearly defined
  • Breakout or breakdown confirms continuation

Visual Interpretation

Support Zone

The lower boundary of the rectangle where buying interest repeatedly emerges, preventing price from falling further.

Resistance Zone

The upper boundary where selling pressure consistently caps price advances.

Range Movement

Price moves horizontally between support and resistance, forming multiple touches on both boundaries, strengthening the pattern’s reliability.

Breakout / Breakdown

A decisive move outside the rectangle signals that one side has regained control and the trend is ready to resume.

Summary

"Visually, the Rectangle pattern appears as a box-like structure on the chart. The longer price respects both boundaries, the more significant the eventual breakout or breakdown becomes."

Market Psychology

Phase 1

Prior Trend

  • The market enters the rectangle after a strong move, either upward or downward, which sets the directional bias.
Phase 2

Balance and Absorption

  • Buyers and sellers reach temporary equilibrium.
  • Buyers defend support, while sellers protect resistance. Volume typically declines.
Phase 3

Pressure Build-Up

  • Repeated tests of support and resistance weaken one side gradually.
  • Market participants anticipate a directional move.
Phase 4

Resolution

  • Once price breaks out of the range, stop losses are triggered and fresh momentum traders enter.
  • The prior trend typically resumes.

Identification Rules

1

Horizontal Levels

Price must trade between clear horizontal support and resistance.

2

Multiple Touches

At least two touches on both support and resistance are required.

3

Volume

Volume should decline during consolidation and expand on breakout.

4

Prior Trend

The rectangle should form after a trending move.

Execution Strategy

1

Entry Signal

Trade the range (buy support, sell resistance)

2

Stop Loss

Trade the breakout/breakdown

3

Take Profit

Stop loss outside box

Signal Confirmation

Is the breakout real?

  • Strong candle close outside the rectangle
  • Increase in volume on breakout or breakdown
  • Price holding above resistance or below support
  • Successful retest of the broken level as support or resistance

Caution: Avoid entering trades inside the range, as price action is often choppy.

Common Mistakes

Myth: Rectangles are neutral

They usually share the bias of the prior trend (continuation), but can reverse.

Myth: Trade the middle

The middle is the "noise" zone. Trade boundaries or breakouts.

How to Trade: Rectangle Pattern

Step-by-step masterclass on trading this pattern profitably.

Coming Soon

Quick Facts

Difficulty
Beginner
Category
Chart Pattern
Type
Neutral

Video Coming Soon

Detailed video breakdown is in production.

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Advanced Course

Detailed walkthrough coming soon

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Essential Reading

Technical Analysis For Dummies
Technical Analysis For Dummies

by Barbara Rockefeller

Read Review
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets

by John J. Murphy

Read Review
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns

by Thomas N. Bulkowski

Read Review

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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.