Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet: 35 Crypto Setups Explained (2026)

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Candlestick Patterns Cheat Sheet: 35 Crypto Setups Explained (2026)

Use this visual candlestick patterns cheat sheet to decode 35+ bullish, bearish, doji and continuation setups. Built as a pattern reference, not a full beginner chart-reading course.

This page is a visual candlestick pattern library for crypto traders. Use it as a fast reference for 35+ bullish, bearish, doji, reversal, and continuation setups, with HTML diagrams you can scan in seconds.

Use this page for pattern recognition

If you want the broader beginner lesson on reading crypto charts, indicators, support and resistance, and chart structure, start with How to Read Crypto Charts for Beginners. This page stays focused on candlestick pattern recognition and pattern context.

Table of Contents

  1. Anatomy of a Candlestick
  2. Single Candle Bullish Patterns (6)
  3. Single Candle Bearish Patterns (6)
  4. The Doji Family (5 types)
  5. Double Candle Bullish Patterns (5)
  6. Double Candle Bearish Patterns (5)
  7. Triple Candle Patterns (8)
  8. Continuation Patterns (4)
  9. Crypto-Specific Considerations
  10. Timeframe Selection Guide
  11. Quick Reference Cheat Sheet

1. Anatomy of a Candlestick

Every candlestick represents the price action within a specific time period. Whether that period is 1 minute or 1 week, the candle always contains the same four data points:

BULLISH (Green)

Close > Open

High
Close Open
Low

BEARISH (Red)

Close < Open

High
Open Close
Low
Component What It Shows Trading Significance
Body (thick part)Range between open and close priceLarge body = strong conviction; small body = indecision
Upper Wick (shadow)Highest price reachedLong upper wick = sellers rejected higher prices
Lower Wick (shadow)Lowest price reachedLong lower wick = buyers defended lower prices
Green CandleClose > Open (bullish)Buyers controlled the period
Red CandleClose < Open (bearish)Sellers controlled the period

Key insight: The relationship between body size and wick length is what creates patterns. A long wick with a small body tells a completely different story than a long body with no wicks. Learning to read this relationship is the foundation of candlestick analysis.

2. Single Candle Bullish Patterns

These patterns appear as a single candle and suggest potential upward price movement. They are strongest when they form at support levels or after a downtrend.

Hammer
Reversal signal
Inverted Hammer
Potential reversal
Bullish Marubozu
Maximum buying power
Spinning Top
Indecision (bullish context)
Bullish Belt Hold
Gap up, strong open
Takuri Line
Extreme rejection of lows
Pattern Key Feature How to Trade It Reliability
HammerSmall body at top, lower wick 2-3x body length, little/no upper wickEnter long above hammer high. Stop below hammer low. Best at support.High
Inverted HammerSmall body at bottom, long upper wick, little/no lower wickWait for next candle confirmation (close above inverted hammer body). Less reliable alone.Medium
Bullish MarubozuFull green body with NO wicks at allExtreme buying pressure. Continuation likely. Can enter on pullback to body midpoint.Very High
Spinning TopTiny body with equal wicks on both sidesIndecision. Only bullish after a downtrend. Needs confirmation.Low alone
Bullish Belt HoldOpens at session low (no lower wick), closes near highGap down open that immediately reverses. Strong if body is large.Medium
Takuri LineLike a hammer but with even longer lower wick (3x+ body)Most powerful single-candle reversal signal. Extreme buyer defense.Very High

Pro tip: The Hammer is the most reliable single-candle bullish pattern in crypto. In Bitcoin specifically, hammers on the daily chart at known support levels have a success rate above 65% when confirmed by volume.

3. Single Candle Bearish Patterns

Mirror images of bullish patterns. These suggest potential downward movement and are strongest at resistance levels or after an uptrend.

Shooting Star
Strong reversal
Hanging Man
Top reversal warning
Bearish Marubozu
Maximum selling power
Spinning Top
Indecision (bearish context)
Bearish Belt Hold
Gap up, sells off
Gravestone Doji
Extreme rejection of highs
Pattern Key Feature How to Trade It Reliability
Shooting StarSmall body at bottom, upper wick 2-3x body, little/no lower wickEnter short below shooting star low. Stop above the wick high. Best at resistance.High
Hanging ManSame shape as hammer but appears after an uptrendWarns that buyers are losing control. Sell if next candle confirms with a close below.Medium
Bearish MarubozuFull red body with NO wicksPanic selling. Expect continuation. Short on any retest of the body midpoint.Very High
Bearish Belt HoldOpens at session high (no upper wick), closes near lowGap up that immediately sells off. More bearish with larger body.Medium
Gravestone DojiOpen = Close at session low, long upper wickComplete rejection of highs. Very bearish at resistance. No confirmation needed if wick is 4x+ body.High

Critical difference: A Hammer and a Hanging Man look identical -- the difference is context. A long lower wick after a downtrend = Hammer (bullish). The same candle after an uptrend = Hanging Man (bearish). Context is everything in candlestick analysis.

Doji candlestick pattern family with visual examples
The Doji family represents market indecision -- each variant tells a different story

4. The Doji Family (5 Types)

A Doji forms when the open and close are virtually identical, creating a cross-like shape. Dojis represent pure market indecision and are among the most important signals in technical analysis. A Doji after a strong trend is a major warning sign.

Standard Doji
Equal indecision
Long-Legged Doji
Extreme volatility
Dragonfly Doji
Bullish reversal
Gravestone Doji
Bearish reversal
Four-Price Doji
Ultra-rare, no movement
Doji Type Visual Shape After Uptrend After Downtrend
Standard Doji+ shape with equal wicksBearish warningBullish warning
Long-Legged Doji+ shape with very long wicksStrong reversal signalStrong reversal signal
Dragonfly DojiT shape (long lower wick only)Less significantVery bullish reversal
Gravestone DojiInverted T (long upper wick only)Very bearish reversalLess significant
Four-Price DojiSingle horizontal line (dash)Extremely rare. O=H=L=C. Indicates zero liquidity or a very brief period.

5. Double Candle Bullish Patterns

Two-candle patterns are more reliable than single candles because they show a shift in momentum between sessions. These bullish patterns appear after downtrends.

Bullish Engulfing
Strong reversal
Piercing Line
Moderate reversal
Bullish Harami
Trend weakening
Tweezer Bottom
Equal lows = support
Counterattack
Bulls fight back
Pattern Structure What It Means Reliability
Bullish EngulfingGreen candle body completely engulfs prior red candle bodyBuyers overwhelmed sellers in a single session. The larger the green candle, the stronger the signal.Very High
Piercing LineGreen candle opens below prior red close, closes above the midpoint of the red bodyBuyers recovered more than half the prior loss. Less powerful than engulfing.Medium-High
Bullish HaramiSmall green candle contained entirely within prior large red candleSelling pressure is fading. The downtrend is losing steam but may not reverse immediately.Medium
Tweezer BottomTwo candles with identical lows (first red, second green)Price tested the same low twice and held. Strong support confirmed.High
Bullish CounterattackRed candle followed by green candle of similar size that closes at the same level as red's closeBulls matched sellers exactly. Power equilibrium shifting.Medium

6. Double Candle Bearish Patterns

The bearish mirrors of the above. These appear after uptrends and warn of selling pressure taking over.

Double candlestick reversal patterns for crypto trading
Double candle patterns show momentum shifts between two consecutive sessions
Bearish Engulfing
Strong reversal
Dark Cloud Cover
Moderate reversal
Bearish Harami
Trend weakening
Tweezer Top
Equal highs = resistance
Counterattack
Bears fight back
Pattern Structure What It Means Reliability
Bearish EngulfingRed candle body completely engulfs prior green candle bodySellers overwhelmed buyers completely. Strongest reversal signal in double-candle category.Very High
Dark Cloud CoverRed candle opens above prior green high, closes below the midpoint of green bodySellers pushed back more than half the prior gains. Moderate reversal.Medium-High
Bearish HaramiSmall red candle contained within prior large green candleBuying momentum fading. Potential top forming.Medium
Tweezer TopTwo candles with identical highs (first green, second red)Price rejected the same high twice. Strong resistance confirmed.High
Bearish CounterattackGreen candle followed by similar-sized red candle closing at same levelSellers matched buyers. Equilibrium shifting bearish.Medium

Volume is king: A Bearish Engulfing pattern on 3x average volume is almost always reliable. The same pattern on low volume is often a fakeout. Always check volume before acting on any double-candle pattern.

7. Triple Candle Patterns

Three-candle patterns are the most reliable candlestick formations because they show the complete cycle: initial trend, hesitation, and reversal. Professional traders weigh these heavily.

Morning Star
Strong bullish reversal
Evening Star
Strong bearish reversal
Three White Soldiers
Strong uptrend
Three Black Crows
Strong downtrend
Three Inside Up
Confirmed bullish
Three Inside Down
Confirmed bearish
Abandoned Baby (Bull)
Rare, very strong
Abandoned Baby (Bear)
Rare, very strong
Pattern Structure Signal Strength Crypto Reliability
Morning Star1) Large red 2) Small body/doji (gap down) 3) Large green closing above midpoint of candle 1Very Strong Bullish85%+ at major support
Evening Star1) Large green 2) Small body/doji (gap up) 3) Large red closing below midpoint of candle 1Very Strong Bearish85%+ at major resistance
Three White SoldiersThree consecutive green candles, each opening within prior body and closing at new highStrong Bullish ContinuationHigh on daily+
Three Black CrowsThree consecutive red candles, each opening within prior body and closing at new lowStrong Bearish ContinuationHigh on daily+
Three Inside Up1) Large red 2) Small green inside (harami) 3) Green closing above candle 1 highConfirmed BullishVery reliable
Three Inside Down1) Large green 2) Small red inside (harami) 3) Red closing below candle 1 lowConfirmed BearishVery reliable
Abandoned Baby (Bull)1) Red 2) Doji that gaps below 3) Green that gaps above the dojiExtremely StrongRare in 24/7 markets
Abandoned Baby (Bear)1) Green 2) Doji that gaps above 3) Red that gaps below the dojiExtremely StrongRare in 24/7 markets

Why "gaps" are rare in crypto: Since crypto trades 24/7, true gaps (where candle 2 opens away from candle 1's close) are uncommon on most timeframes. You will see them most on the weekly chart or during extreme volatility events. Morning/Evening Stars without gaps are still valid but slightly less powerful.

8. Continuation Patterns

Not all patterns signal reversals. These formations suggest the current trend will continue after a brief pause. Traders use them to add to existing positions.

Rising Three
Bullish continuation
Falling Three
Bearish continuation
Upside Tasuki Gap
Gap holds = bullish
Mat Hold
Strong continuation
Pattern Structure How to Use It
Rising Three MethodsLarge green, 3 small declining reds (within the green), then another large greenThe small reds are profit-taking, not reversal. Enter long on the 5th candle breakout.
Falling Three MethodsLarge red, 3 small rising greens (within the red), then another large redThe small greens are dead-cat bounces. Enter short on the 5th candle breakdown.
Upside Tasuki GapTwo green candles with a gap, then a red that enters the gap but doesn't close itAs long as the gap holds, the uptrend continues. Enter on bounce from gap support.
Mat HoldLarge green, 2-3 small declining candles, then a large green surpassing the firstSimilar to Rising Three but more compact. Strong bullish continuation signal.
Candlestick analysis on cryptocurrency charts with volume indicators
Crypto markets have unique characteristics that affect candlestick pattern reliability

9. Crypto-Specific Considerations

Candlestick patterns were developed for traditional markets with fixed trading hours. Crypto operates differently, so you need to adjust your analysis:

Key Differences in Crypto

24/7 Markets = No Opening Gaps. Traditional gap patterns (Abandoned Baby, Tasuki Gaps) are much rarer in crypto because there is no market close. The exception: weekly candles and tokens listed on a single exchange with downtime.

Whale Manipulation on Low-Cap Tokens. A single wallet can create any candlestick pattern on a token with less than $1M daily volume. Only trust candlestick patterns on assets with deep liquidity: BTC, ETH, SOL, and other top-20 coins.

Daily Close at 00:00 UTC. Unlike stocks with a defined close, crypto uses an arbitrary midnight UTC close. This means "daily" candle patterns can look different depending on which exchange you use if timestamps vary.

Extreme Wicks Are Common. Crypto wicks can be 10-20% in a single candle during liquidation cascades. What looks like a "signal" may just be a flash crash from cascading leveraged positions being closed. Always check funding rates alongside candlestick patterns.

Correlation with BTC. Most altcoin candlestick patterns are dictated by Bitcoin's movement. A perfect Morning Star on an altcoin is meaningless if BTC is in freefall. Always check the BTC chart before trading altcoin patterns.

10. Timeframe Selection Guide

The same pattern on different timeframes has dramatically different implications. Here is how to choose:

Timeframe Best For Pattern Reliability Noise Level
1 minuteScalping onlyVery Low (30-35%)Extreme
5 minuteScalpingLow (35-40%)Very High
15 minuteIntraday tradingMedium (45-50%)High
1 hourDay tradingMedium-High (50-55%)Moderate
4 hour *Swing trading (RECOMMENDED)High (60-65%)Low
DailyPosition tradingVery High (65-70%)Very Low
WeeklyLong-term investingHighest (70-75%)Minimal

The sweet spot for most crypto traders is the 4-hour chart. It filters out most noise while still giving you multiple candles per day to work with. Use the daily chart for trend direction and the 4H for entry timing. This "multi-timeframe" approach is used by most professional crypto traders.

11. Quick Reference Cheat Sheet

Save this table as your go-to reference when trading:

Pattern Type Candles Signal Strength
HammerReversal1Bullish+++
Shooting StarReversal1Bearish+++
Bullish MarubozuMomentum1Bullish++++
Bearish MarubozuMomentum1Bearish++++
Doji (any type)Indecision1Neutral++
Bullish EngulfingReversal2Bullish++++
Bearish EngulfingReversal2Bearish++++
Piercing LineReversal2Bullish+++
Dark Cloud CoverReversal2Bearish+++
Tweezer BottomReversal2Bullish+++
Tweezer TopReversal2Bearish+++
Morning StarReversal3Bullish+++++
Evening StarReversal3Bearish+++++
Three White SoldiersContinuation3Bullish++++
Three Black CrowsContinuation3Bearish++++
Rising Three MethodsContinuation5Bullish++++
Falling Three MethodsContinuation5Bearish++++

The Golden Rules of Candlestick Trading

  1. Context over pattern. The same candle means different things at different locations. Support/resistance is always more important than the pattern itself.
  2. Volume confirms everything. A reversal pattern on low volume is just noise. High volume = conviction.
  3. Higher timeframes win. A daily hammer beats a 5-minute hammer every time. Trade the highest timeframe your strategy allows.
  4. Wait for confirmation. The best traders wait for the next candle to confirm the pattern before entering. Patience prevents fakeouts.
  5. Combine with other analysis. Candlesticks + RSI + volume + on-chain data = professional-grade analysis. No single tool works alone.
Professional crypto trading setup showing candlestick chart analysis
Combining candlestick patterns with support/resistance and volume creates high-probability trade setups

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