If you ask experienced traders which single indicator signal they trust most — RSI divergence is consistently the answer.
It is not the easiest signal to spot. It requires practice. But when identified correctly — it provides early warning of major reversals that most traders completely miss.
Divergence occurs when price and an indicator move in opposite directions.
Price tells one story. The indicator tells a different story.
When they disagree — the indicator is often right. Price is about to catch up with what momentum has been signaling.
Price: Makes a lower low — new price bottom.
RSI: Makes a higher low — momentum improving.
What it means:
Price is falling to new lows — but the selling momentum behind each new low is weaker than the previous.
Sellers are losing power. Each push lower requires more effort for less result. The downtrend is exhausting itself.
Visual:
Draw a line connecting the two price lows — slopes downward.
Draw a line connecting the two RSI lows — slopes upward.
Lines diverge — hence the name.
Trading Regular Bullish Divergence:
Most powerful when:
Price: Makes a higher high — new price top.
RSI: Makes a lower high — momentum fading.
What it means:
Price reaching new highs — but the buying momentum behind each new high is weaker.
Buyers losing power. Each push higher requires more effort for less result. Uptrend running out of energy.
Trading Regular Bearish Divergence:
Most powerful when:
Regular divergence signals reversals. Hidden divergence signals trend continuation — a completely different use.
Hidden Bullish Divergence:
Price: Makes a higher low — normal pullback in uptrend.
RSI: Makes a lower low — RSI pulled back more than price.
What it means:
Price is in an uptrend and pulling back normally. RSI pulled back more than price — suggesting the pullback is overdone. The uptrend will resume.
Use: Enter long during pullbacks in uptrends.
Hidden Bearish Divergence:
Price: Makes a lower high — normal bounce in downtrend.
RSI: Makes a higher high — RSI bounced more than price.
What it means:
Price is in a downtrend bouncing normally. RSI bounced more than price — bounce is overdone. Downtrend will resume.
Use: Enter short during bounces in downtrends.
| Type | Price | RSI | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regular Bullish | Lower low | Higher low | Reversal up |
| Regular Bearish | Higher high | Lower high | Reversal down |
| Hidden Bullish | Higher low | Lower low | Continuation up |
| Hidden Bearish | Lower high | Higher high | Continuation down |
Divergence on multiple timeframes simultaneously is extremely powerful.
Weekly bullish divergence + Daily bullish divergence:
Two timeframes showing the same signal = very high conviction reversal.
Major Bitcoin bottoms in 2018 and 2022 both showed weekly RSI divergence before the major reversals began.
Mistake 1 — Forcing divergence
Not every two highs or lows qualify as divergence. Both price swings must be clearly significant — not minor fluctuations.
Mistake 2 — No confirmation
Entering on divergence alone without a confirmation candlestick leads to premature entries that stop out before the reversal occurs.
Mistake 3 — Wrong timeframe
Divergence on 1 minute chart means almost nothing. Focus on 4 hour and daily timeframes for reliable signals.
Mistake 4 — Ignoring trend
Regular bullish divergence in a powerful downtrend may only produce temporary bounces — not full reversals. Context matters.
The highest probability divergence trades combine:
When all four factors align — you have one of the highest probability setups available in technical analysis.
In the next topic we will study volume indicators — starting with why volume is the most honest indicator of all.