Mdraghib
Well-known member
A lot of traders jump into price action strategies because they’re clean, indicator-free, and feel “pure.” But beginners often repeat the same mistakes that cost them money. Here are 10 I see all the time (and what to do instead):
What’s the biggest mistake you made when you first tried price action?
- Forcing trades on every candle – Not every move is a setup. Patience pays.
- Ignoring the higher timeframe – A bullish pin bar on 5m means little if the daily trend is bearish.
- Not marking key levels – Support/resistance zones matter more than candlestick shapes in isolation.
- Overcomplicating patterns – Stick to a few reliable setups instead of chasing every formation.
- Trading without context – News, volatility, and sessions still influence price action.
- Poor risk management – A textbook setup still fails sometimes. Always size trades correctly.
- Chasing the market – Entering late just because price “looks strong” usually ends in regret.
- Ignoring market structure – Higher highs/lows or lower lows/highs tell you more than any single candle.
- No backtesting – If you haven’t tested your strategy over months of data, you’re gambling.
- Not journaling trades – Without reviewing mistakes, you’ll keep repeating them.
What’s the biggest mistake you made when you first tried price action?