Crypto charts look confusing at first — red and green bars, wiggly lines, random numbers. But they’re actually simple once you know what each part means.
This guide covers the basics: candlesticks, volume, support/resistance, and trends. No advanced technical analysis — just what you need to understand what you’re looking at.
What Is a Candlestick?
Each “candle” on a chart represents price action over a specific time period (1 minute, 1 hour, 1 day, etc.).
A single candlestick shows four data points:
- Open — Price when the period started
- Close — Price when the period ended
- High — Highest price during the period
- Low — Lowest price during the period
Green candle (bullish): Price went up (close > open) Red candle (bearish): Price went down (close < open)
The thick part is the “body” (open to close). The thin lines are “wicks” or “shadows” (high to low).
What Is Volume?
Volume is the total amount of crypto traded during a period. It appears as bars at the bottom of the chart.
High volume = More people are buying and selling. The move is meaningful. Low volume = Few people are trading. The move may be a false signal.
How to read volume:
- Price going up + volume increasing = strong uptrend
- Price going up + volume decreasing = weak uptrend (may reverse)
- Price going down + volume increasing = strong downtrend
- Price going down + volume decreasing = weak downtrend (sell pressure fading)
Support and Resistance
Support is a price level where buying is strong enough to stop the price from falling further. Think of it as a floor.
Resistance is a price level where selling is strong enough to stop the price from rising further. Think of it as a ceiling.
How to find them:
- Look for price levels where the chart has reversed multiple times
- Round numbers often act as support/resistance (e.g., $50K, $100K for Bitcoin)
- Previous highs become resistance; previous lows become support
What happens:
- Price hits support → likely bounces up
- Price hits resistance → likely falls back
- Price breaks through support → that level becomes new resistance
- Price breaks through resistance → that level becomes new support
Trends
Uptrend: Higher highs and higher lows. Price makes progress upward. Downtrend: Lower highs and lower lows. Price drifts downward. Sideways (range): Price bounces between support and resistance without clear direction.
How to trade trends:
- In an uptrend: buy on pullbacks to support
- In a downtrend: wait for the trend to reverse before buying
- In a range: buy at support, sell at resistance
Common Chart Patterns
Bullish Patterns (price may go up)
| Pattern | What It Looks Like | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Higher low | Price makes a low above the previous low | Uptrend is forming |
| Breakout above resistance | Price pushes through resistance with volume | Upward momentum |
| Golden cross | 50-day moving average crosses above 200-day | Long-term bullish |
Bearish Patterns (price may go down)
| Pattern | What It Looks Like | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Lower high | Price makes a high below the previous high | Downtrend is forming |
| Breakdown below support | Price falls through support with volume | Downward momentum |
| Death cross | 50-day crosses below 200-day | Long-term bearish |
Simple Moving Averages (SMA)
Moving averages smooth out price data to show the trend direction.
- 50-day SMA (short-term): Shows the trend over the last 2 months
- 200-day SMA (long-term): Shows the trend over the last 8 months
How to use them:
- Price above 200-day SMA = long-term uptrend
- Price below 200-day SMA = long-term downtrend
- 50-day SMA crossing above 200-day SMA = “golden cross” (bullish)
- 50-day SMA crossing below 200-day SMA = “death cross” (bearish)
RSI (Relative Strength Index)
RSI measures whether a crypto is overbought or oversold. It ranges from 0 to 100.
- RSI above 70: Overbought — price may fall
- RSI below 30: Oversold — price may rise
- RSI around 50: Neutral — no clear signal
Limitation: In strong trends, RSI can stay overbought or oversold for weeks. Don’t trade against a trend just because RSI says “overbought.”
Putting It All Together
When you look at a crypto chart, ask these questions:
- What’s the trend? Up, down, or sideways?
- Where are support and resistance? What levels matter?
- Is volume confirming the move? High volume = real. Low volume = fake.
- What does RSI say? Is it overbought or oversold?
- Where’s the 200-day SMA? Above or below price?
Tools to Start Charting
- TradingView — Best free charting tool. Web-based, no download needed.
- CoinGecko — Basic charts with price history
- Exchange charts — Binance, Coinbase, Kraken all have built-in charts
Verdict
You don’t need to be a chart expert to succeed in crypto. But understanding basic concepts — candlesticks, support/resistance, volume, and trends — helps you make better decisions.
Start by looking at Bitcoin’s daily chart for 5 minutes every day. After a month, you’ll naturally recognize patterns and trends.
Related: What Is DCA in Crypto? | Is Crypto a Good Investment for 2026? | What Is Gas? Understanding Fees
This question comes up weekly on BitcoinTalk. The community’s advice: learn the basics on TradingView with paper trading before using real money.