When markets take a break during a trend, they often form continuation patterns — short periods of consolidation before price resumes its original direction. Learning to identify and trade these patterns helps you enter with confidence and ride trends longer. This guide will show you how.
Continuation patterns suggest that the current trend is likely to continue after a brief pause or correction. These patterns form when buyers and sellers temporarily balance out before momentum resumes.
They help confirm trend strength
Provide low-risk entry opportunities
Can signal breakout points for better entries
Bull Flag: Appears in an uptrend; price consolidates downward
Bear Flag: Appears in a downtrend; price consolidates upward
Look for strong impulse move before the flag forms
Small symmetrical triangle after a strong price move
Forms from tightening price action
Breakout direction often follows the previous trend
Ascending Triangle: Bullish; flat resistance with rising support
Descending Triangle: Bearish; flat support with falling resistance
Symmetrical Triangle: Neutral but often breaks with trend direction
Price moves between support and resistance
Breakout confirms trend continuation
Identify the pattern in a strong existing trend
Wait for breakout confirmation (candle close or volume surge)
Set stop-loss just outside the pattern
Use the height of the pattern to estimate your profit target
Use volume to confirm breakouts
Combine patterns with trendlines or indicators like MACD/RSI
Avoid trading patterns on very small timeframes (more noise)
Continuation patterns are powerful tools when used correctly. Instead of guessing the next move, you can wait for the market to “pause,” recognize the pattern, and trade in sync with the trend — like a pro.