An ATR-based trend-following indicator that provides clear buy and sell signals with built-in trailing stop-loss levels.
SuperTrend is one of the most popular trend-following indicators among Indian traders, especially for Nifty and Bank Nifty intraday and positional trading. It plots a single line on the price chart that changes color based on the trend direction: green when the trend is bullish (buy signal) and red when bearish (sell signal).
What makes SuperTrend special is its simplicity. Unlike complex indicators that require interpretation, SuperTrend gives you an unambiguous signal: if the price is above the SuperTrend line and it is green, you are in a buy zone. If the price is below and it is red, you are in a sell zone. There is no gray area.
SuperTrend is built on the Average True Range (ATR), which means it automatically adjusts for volatility. In high-volatility markets, the SuperTrend line stays further from the price, preventing premature stop-outs. In low-volatility markets, it tightens up, locking in more profits. This adaptive behavior makes it superior to fixed-percentage trailing stops.
The indicator was popularized by Olivier Seban and has become a staple on Indian trading platforms like Zerodha Kite, Angel One, and Upstox. Many algo-trading strategies on NSE are built around SuperTrend signals, making it one of the most backtested indicators in the Indian market context.
(High + Low) / 2 = Median price of the candle (HL2)
ATR = Average True Range over the specified period (default: 10 periods)
Multiplier = ATR multiplier (default: 3)
SuperTrend = Uses the Lower Band when in uptrend (acts as support), Upper Band when in downtrend (acts as resistance)
Signal flip = When price closes above the Upper Band, trend flips to bullish. When price closes below the Lower Band, trend flips to bearish.
SuperTrend flips color at signal points. Green = bullish (line acts as trailing support). Red = bearish (line acts as trailing resistance).
The default setting of 10-period ATR with a multiplier of 3 works well on Nifty daily and 15-minute charts. It provides a good balance between signal frequency and accuracy. Widely used by Nifty option traders.
Bank Nifty is more volatile than Nifty, so a lower multiplier of 2 is preferred. This tighter setting captures Bank Nifty's sharper moves while the 10-period ATR adapts to its higher volatility.
For quick intraday scalps on the 5-minute chart, a shorter ATR period of 7 with multiplier 2 generates more signals. Best used during the first 2 hours when volatility is highest.
For swing/positional trades lasting several days, a 14-period ATR with multiplier 3 on the daily chart provides fewer but higher-quality signals. Reduces whipsaws significantly.
A higher multiplier of 4 creates a wider band, resulting in fewer signal flips. Good for traders who prefer fewer trades with larger profit targets and wider stop-losses.
For individual NSE stocks like Reliance, TCS, or HDFC Bank, a multiplier of 2.5 often provides the best balance. Adjust based on the stock's individual volatility profile.
Only take SuperTrend buy signals when the price is above the 200 EMA (long-term uptrend), and only take sell signals when below. This dramatically reduces false signals. On Nifty daily chart, this combination has historically improved the win rate from approximately 40% (SuperTrend alone) to over 55%.
On the 15-minute chart, take SuperTrend buy signals only when the candle also closes above the 20 EMA. This dual confirmation ensures you are entering with both short-term and medium-term momentum on your side. Particularly effective on Bank Nifty during trending sessions.
Plot two SuperTrend indicators: one with default settings (10,3) and one with conservative settings (10,4). Buy only when both turn green; sell only when both turn red. When they disagree, stay in cash. This approach reduces the number of trades but significantly improves the quality of signals.
Check the daily SuperTrend for the primary trend direction. If it is green (bullish), only take buy signals from the 15-minute SuperTrend during the day. Ignore 15-minute sell signals or use them only to book partial profits, not to go short.
This multi-timeframe approach keeps you aligned with the bigger picture while using the shorter timeframe for precise entry and exit timing.
At 9:45 AM, the SuperTrend (10,3) on Nifty 15-minute chart flips from red to green at 24,380. The 20 EMA is also below the price, confirming bullish momentum.
A trader buys Nifty 24,400 CE at ₹120. SuperTrend support line is at 24,340 (40 points below entry), serving as the stop-loss level.
Nifty rallies to 24,580 by 1 PM (+200 points). The CE option moves to ₹210. Profit = ₹90 x 25 = ₹2,250 per lot. The SuperTrend line trailed up to 24,480 by exit time, locking in profits.
The daily SuperTrend (10,2) on Bank Nifty flips green at 51,200 after a 3-week downtrend. A positional trader buys Bank Nifty futures at 51,200 with SuperTrend support at 50,600 (stop-loss).
Over the next 12 trading sessions, Bank Nifty rallies to 53,800 (+2,600 points). The SuperTrend line trails up to 52,400, at which point Bank Nifty reverses and triggers the exit. Net profit = 1,200 points x 15 qty = ₹18,000 per lot.
SuperTrend is a trend-following indicator. In sideways, range-bound markets, it will generate repeated false signals (whipsaws), leading to multiple small losses that erode capital. Identify whether the market is trending or consolidating before relying on SuperTrend. Use ADX above 25 as a filter to confirm a trending market.
A lower multiplier (like 1 or 1.5) makes SuperTrend extremely sensitive, flipping with every minor pullback. This leads to excessive trading and transaction costs. Use multipliers of 2-4 depending on your timeframe. Faster is not always better; accuracy matters more than speed.
No single indicator is a complete trading system. SuperTrend does not account for volume, market structure, or fundamental factors. Combine SuperTrend with at least one confirmation tool (EMA, RSI, volume) and always consider the broader market context.
Many SuperTrend signals occur during choppy periods or near major support/resistance levels where the signal may fail. Be selective. The best SuperTrend signals come after extended consolidations or at the start of fresh trends, not during indecisive market phases.
ATR-based trend-following overlay indicator. Plots directly on the price chart.
Period: 10, Multiplier: 3. Adjust multiplier based on instrument volatility.
Color flip green = buy. Color flip red = sell. The line itself serves as a trailing stop-loss.
Trending markets, Nifty/Bank Nifty intraday, positional swing trades, and automated trading systems.
Whipsaws in sideways markets, lagging nature means you miss the start and end of moves.
EMA (trend filter), RSI (overbought/oversold), ADX (trend strength), Volume, and VWAP.
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