Loading live prices...

Candlestick Patterns

Candlestick patterns are the language of price action. Originating from 18th-century Japanese rice traders, these patterns reveal the battle between buyers and sellers within each trading session. Learn to read 12 essential patterns used daily on NSE and BSE.

How to Read Candlesticks

Every candlestick tells a story of four data points: the Open, High, Low, and Close (OHLC) of a trading session. The thick part is the "body" and the thin lines above and below are called "wicks" or "shadows."

A green (bullish) candle means the close was higher than the open — buyers won that session. A red (bearish) candle means the close was lower than the open — sellers dominated. The length of the body shows conviction; the length of the wicks shows rejection.

Single vs Multi-Candle Patterns

Single-Candle Patterns

Formed by just one candlestick. They are quick to spot but generally need more confirmation from subsequent candles or volume.

  • Doji, Hammer, Shooting Star, Inverted Hammer
  • Faster to identify in real-time trading
  • Best confirmed with next day's price action
  • Useful on all timeframes (1-min to monthly)

Multi-Candle Patterns

Formed over 2-3 sessions. They carry more weight because they show a shift in momentum across multiple trading days.

  • Engulfing, Morning/Evening Star, Three Soldiers/Crows
  • Higher reliability than single-candle patterns
  • Volume across all candles matters for confirmation
  • Most effective on daily and weekly charts

12 Essential Candlestick Patterns

Doji

Neutral / Reversal Medium Reliability

A Doji forms when the open and close are virtually identical, creating a cross or plus-sign shape. It signifies perfect equilibrium between buyers and sellers — neither side could gain the upper hand during the session.

The Doji becomes powerful when it appears after a strong trend. After a prolonged uptrend, a Doji signals that buyers are running out of steam. After a sustained downtrend, it suggests sellers are losing conviction. The length of the shadows indicates the range of indecision.

  • Context: Most significant at the end of a strong trend or at key support/resistance levels
  • Confirmation: Wait for the next candle to close in the reversal direction with above-average volume
NSE Example: HDFC Bank showed a Doji at ₹1,720 resistance in March 2024 after a 12% rally. The next session opened lower with heavy volume, confirming a short-term reversal to ₹1,650.

Hammer

Bullish Reversal High Reliability

The Hammer has a small body at the top and a long lower shadow at least twice the length of the body. It appears at the bottom of a downtrend and signals that sellers pushed prices significantly lower during the session, but buyers stepped in aggressively to drive the price back near the open.

The colour of the body matters less than the shape, though a green (bullish) Hammer is slightly more reliable. The longer the lower shadow, the stronger the rejection of lower prices. Volume should ideally spike on the Hammer day, showing genuine buying interest.

  • Context: Must appear after a downtrend or at a key support level to be valid
  • Confirmation: A bullish candle the following session that closes above the Hammer's body
NSE Example: Tata Steel formed a textbook Hammer at ₹108 support in June 2023 with a lower wick touching ₹102. Next session opened at ₹110 and rallied 15% over two weeks to ₹124.

Inverted Hammer

Bullish Reversal Medium Reliability

The Inverted Hammer appears at the bottom of a downtrend and looks like an upside-down Hammer — a small body at the bottom with a long upper shadow. It shows that buyers attempted to push prices higher during the session, but sellers pulled it back down near the open.

Despite the session ending near its low, the Inverted Hammer is bullish because it signals the first attempt by buyers to regain control. The upper wick shows buying interest is emerging. However, this pattern absolutely requires confirmation — the next session must open above the Inverted Hammer's body.

  • Context: Valid only after a downtrend or at established support zones
  • Confirmation: A gap-up open or strong bullish candle the following day is essential
NSE Example: Infosys showed an Inverted Hammer at ₹1,350 after a 10% decline in October 2023. The next day's gap-up opening and 3% rally confirmed the reversal, leading to a recovery to ₹1,520.

Bullish Engulfing

Bullish Reversal High Reliability

The Bullish Engulfing pattern is a two-candle reversal pattern where a small red candle is completely "engulfed" by the following larger green candle. The green candle's body must open below and close above the previous red candle's body, showing a dramatic shift from selling to buying pressure.

This is one of the most reliable candlestick patterns, especially when it occurs at a key support level or after a prolonged downtrend. The larger the green candle relative to the red one, the more significant the signal. Volume should be noticeably higher on the engulfing day.

  • Context: Strongest when appearing at support, near moving averages, or after 3+ red candles
  • Confirmation: Follow-through buying the next session; RSI divergence adds confidence
NSE Example: Reliance Industries formed a Bullish Engulfing at ₹2,220 support in January 2024 with 2x average volume. The stock rallied ₹180 over the next 8 sessions to reach ₹2,400.

Bearish Engulfing

Bearish Reversal High Reliability

The mirror image of the Bullish Engulfing — a small green candle is completely swallowed by a larger red candle. The red candle opens above the previous green candle's close and closes below its open, signalling an abrupt takeover by sellers.

When this pattern appears at resistance levels or after an extended uptrend, it often marks the beginning of a correction. The pattern is especially potent near all-time highs or round-number psychological levels (like ₹500, ₹1,000, ₹2,000) where profit-booking is common.

  • Context: Most reliable at resistance zones, overbought RSI readings, or after a gap-up that fails
  • Confirmation: A lower open next session and increased delivery-based volume
NSE Example: Bajaj Finance printed a Bearish Engulfing at ₹7,800 resistance in December 2023 after a 20% rally. The stock corrected 8% over the following two weeks to ₹7,175.

Morning Star

Bullish Reversal High Reliability

The Morning Star is a powerful three-candle bullish reversal pattern. It begins with a large red candle (continuing the downtrend), followed by a small-bodied candle that gaps down (the "star" showing indecision), and concludes with a large green candle that closes well into the first candle's body.

This pattern represents a complete narrative: Day 1 shows sellers in control, Day 2 shows exhaustion and indecision, and Day 3 shows buyers taking over decisively. The gap between the first and second candles is ideal but not always present in Indian markets due to overnight moves. A Doji as the middle candle (Morning Doji Star) is even more significant.

  • Context: Appears after a sustained downtrend, ideally near a major support level
  • Confirmation: Volume should increase on Day 3; price should hold above the middle candle's low
NSE Example: ICICI Bank formed a Morning Star at ₹890 support in March 2023. The three-day pattern completed with a 2.5% rally on Day 3 with 1.8x average volume, leading to a move to ₹1,020 over the next month.

Evening Star

Bearish Reversal High Reliability

The Evening Star is the bearish counterpart of the Morning Star. A large green candle is followed by a small-bodied candle that gaps up (the "star"), and then a large red candle that closes well into the first candle's body. It signals a top is forming.

The Evening Star often appears at the peak of a rally when euphoria is highest. The small middle candle represents the moment when upward momentum stalls, and the final red candle confirms that sellers have regained control. This pattern is particularly common near earnings announcements when expectations are already priced in.

  • Context: Found at the top of uptrends, near resistance, or at overbought conditions
  • Confirmation: Heavy selling volume on Day 3 and a lower open on Day 4
NSE Example: TCS formed an Evening Star near ₹3,900 all-time high in September 2023. The pattern preceded a 12% correction to ₹3,430 over the following three weeks as IT sector sentiment weakened.

Shooting Star

Bearish Reversal Medium Reliability

The Shooting Star appears at the top of an uptrend with a small body near the low and a long upper shadow at least twice the body's length. It shows that buyers pushed prices to new highs during the session, but sellers overwhelmed them and drove the price back down near the open.

Think of it as a failed attempt to move higher. The long upper wick represents rejected buying — a "shooting star" that briefly illuminated higher prices before falling back. A red Shooting Star is slightly more bearish than a green one. It is the upside-down version of the Hammer but appears in the opposite market context.

  • Context: Must occur after an uptrend or at resistance. In a downtrend, it is an Inverted Hammer instead
  • Confirmation: A bearish candle the next session closing below the Shooting Star's body
NSE Example: Adani Enterprises showed a Shooting Star at ₹3,400 in February 2024 with an intraday high of ₹3,520. The stock reversed sharply, falling 9% to ₹3,090 over the next five sessions.

Three White Soldiers

Bullish Continuation High Reliability

Three White Soldiers is a powerful bullish pattern consisting of three consecutive long green candles, each opening within the previous candle's body and closing progressively higher. Each candle should have small or no upper shadows, showing sustained buying pressure without rejection.

This pattern indicates a strong shift in momentum from bearish to bullish. It is most meaningful when it appears after a downtrend or consolidation phase. However, be cautious if the three candles are extremely long — this could signal exhaustion rather than the beginning of a sustained trend (the "advance block" variation).

  • Context: Best after a downtrend, a base formation, or a breakout from consolidation
  • Confirmation: Increasing volume across all three sessions; RSI not yet overbought
NSE Example: SBI showed Three White Soldiers at ₹560 in November 2023 after a month-long consolidation. Each day gained 1.5-2%, and the pattern launched a rally to ₹680 over the next six weeks.

Three Black Crows

Bearish Continuation High Reliability

Three Black Crows is the bearish mirror of Three White Soldiers — three consecutive long red candles, each opening within the prior candle's body and closing progressively lower. Each candle should have minimal lower shadows, indicating persistent selling with no meaningful buying attempts.

This pattern signals a decisive shift from bullish to bearish sentiment. It is particularly ominous when it appears after a prolonged uptrend or near all-time highs, as it suggests institutional distribution (smart money exiting). The pattern demands respect; fighting it without a clear reversal signal is risky.

  • Context: Most significant after uptrends, near resistance, or following negative news catalysts
  • Confirmation: Increasing volume on each red candle; delivery percentage rising (in NSE data)
NSE Example: Paytm (One97 Communications) formed Three Black Crows in January 2024 after RBI's action on Paytm Payments Bank. Each session fell 5-8%, with volume surging 4x above average, leading to a 45% decline.

Piercing Line

Bullish Reversal Medium Reliability

The Piercing Line is a two-candle bullish reversal pattern. The first candle is a long red candle continuing the downtrend. The second candle opens below the first candle's low (gap down) but closes above the midpoint of the first candle's body, "piercing" into it. The deeper the penetration, the more bullish the signal.

This pattern works because the gap-down opening initially confirms bearish sentiment, but the strong buying that follows catches shorts off guard. As they scramble to cover, it accelerates the upward move. The key requirement is that the second candle must close above the midpoint of the first — if it does not, the pattern is invalid.

  • Context: Must appear in a downtrend, ideally near support or after panic selling
  • Confirmation: A gap-up or continuation buying the following session validates the reversal
NSE Example: ITC formed a Piercing Line at ₹410 in August 2023. After a ₹15 gap-down open, the stock recovered ₹22 in a single session, closing at ₹417. This marked the bottom before a rally to ₹470.

Dark Cloud Cover

Bearish Reversal Medium Reliability

Dark Cloud Cover is the bearish counterpart of the Piercing Line. The first candle is a long green candle showing bullish strength. The second candle opens above the first candle's high (gap up) but sells off aggressively, closing below the midpoint of the first candle's body, casting a "dark cloud" over the bulls.

The psychology behind this pattern is devastating for longs. The gap-up open creates initial euphoria, but when price reverses sharply and closes deep into the prior green candle, it traps all the buyers who entered on the gap up. This trapped-long scenario often leads to accelerated selling over the following sessions.

  • Context: Appears in uptrends, near resistance levels or after earnings-driven gap-ups that fail
  • Confirmation: A red candle the following day and breakdown below the first candle's open
NSE Example: Asian Paints formed a Dark Cloud Cover at ₹3,350 in November 2023. Despite a gap-up opening at ₹3,380, heavy selling closed the day at ₹3,260, below the prior candle's midpoint. A 10% decline followed.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Ready to Start Your Trading Journey?

Open your Demat account today and take the first step towards mastering the stock market.

Click Here to Get Started