The Support and Resistance Flip: Your Secret Weapon for Trend Trading
Have you ever watched a level that was rock-solid resistance suddenly become a perfect launchpad for price to bounce higher? That’s not magic—it’s a support and resistance flip, one of the most powerful concepts in technical analysis. When a level that once stopped price from rising starts to hold it as support, it signals a major shift in market sentiment. This simple yet effective strategy can help you enter strong trends early and avoid buying at the top.
How it Works
In a trending market, old resistance often becomes new support (and vice versa). This happens because the traders who were previously selling at that level are now trapped or have changed their minds, while new buyers step in. The flip confirms that the bulls (in an uptrend) have taken control. The more times a level is tested as resistance before breaking, the stronger it often becomes as support afterward.
The Setup
1. Identify a strong resistance level on any timeframe (daily or 4-hour works well for swing trades). Look for at least two touches where price rejected the level.
2. Wait for a decisive breakout above that resistance. A clean daily close or a strong 4-hour candle above the level is ideal.

3. Watch for a retest of that same level from above. This is the “flip” moment. Price should touch or come very close to the old resistance (now support) and bounce.
4. Enter the trade on the bounce candle close (e.g., a bullish engulfing or a hammer at the flipped level).
5. Set a stop loss just below the flipped level (typically 1-2% below).
6. Take profit at the next logical resistance level or use a trailing stop to ride the trend.
Risk Management
- Never trade a flip that hasn’t been retested. A breakout that runs away without a retest often fails.
- Use a 2:1 risk-to-reward ratio minimum. If your stop is 2% below entry, aim for at least 4% profit.
- Watch for volume. A flip that happens on low volume is less reliable. Look for increasing volume on the retest bounce.
- Avoid flipping levels on very short timeframes (like 1-minute or 5-minute) unless you are a scalper—false flips are more common there.
- If price breaks back below the flipped level after your entry, exit immediately. The flip has failed.
Conclusion
The support and resistance flip is a timeless strategy that works across all markets—crypto, stocks, forex, or commodities. It helps you trade with the trend instead of against it, and it gives you a clear, objective entry point with a logical stop. Start by practicing on a demo chart: mark a few obvious resistance levels, wait for a breakout, and watch for the retest. Once you see it happen a few times, you’ll gain the confidence to use it in real trading. Remember, patience is key—the best flips are the ones you wait for.
Happy trading, and see you at CryptoSimplified.net!