Support And Resistance Calculator

Estimate market zones from daily price data. Review multiple formulas with export ready reports fast. Use support and resistance levels for structured planning today.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Formula Used

Classic Pivot

Pivot = (High + Low + Close) / 3

R1 = (2 × Pivot) - Low

S1 = (2 × Pivot) - High

R2 = Pivot + (High - Low)

S2 = Pivot - (High - Low)

Fibonacci Pivot

R1 = Pivot + 0.382 × Range

R2 = Pivot + 0.618 × Range

R3 = Pivot + 1.000 × Range

S1 = Pivot - 0.382 × Range

S2 = Pivot - 0.618 × Range

S3 = Pivot - 1.000 × Range

Woodie Pivot

Woodie Pivot = (High + Low + 2 × Close) / 4

Camarilla

R levels use Close + Range × 1.1 divided by 12, 6, 4, and 2.

S levels use Close - Range × 1.1 divided by 12, 6, 4, and 2.

DeMark

DeMark changes its base value by comparing close and open.

How To Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the high, low, open, and close values.
  2. Enter the current price for nearest zone analysis.
  3. Add ATR when volatility zones are needed.
  4. Enter tick size when prices must round to valid steps.
  5. Select all methods or one preferred formula.
  6. Choose long or short planning side.
  7. Press the calculate button.
  8. Download the report as CSV or PDF.

Example Data Table

High Low Open Close Current ATR Method
105.40 98.20 100.10 103.60 102.75 2.10 All Methods
251.80 244.50 246.20 249.70 250.10 3.40 Classic Pivot
72.90 69.10 70.40 71.80 71.20 1.25 Fibonacci Pivot

Support And Resistance Planning Guide

Why Levels Matter

Support and resistance levels help a trader organize price behavior. They do not predict the future alone. They mark areas where buying or selling pressure may appear. This calculator turns daily high, low, close, and open values into structured levels. It also compares several pivot systems. That makes the result easier to test.

Market Zone Meaning

A support level is a lower price area. Buyers may defend it. A resistance level is a higher price area. Sellers may react there. When price breaks a level with volume, the same area may change its role. Old resistance can become support. Old support can become resistance.

Method Comparison

The classic pivot method uses the average of high, low, and close. Fibonacci levels expand from that pivot by using range ratios. Woodie levels give more weight to the close. Camarilla levels create tighter intraday zones around closing price. DeMark levels change by comparing close with open. Each method gives a different market view.

Advanced Review

Advanced use means comparing clusters, not trusting one line. A cluster occurs when two or more methods print levels near the same price. Those zones may be more important. The calculator also checks the current price. It finds the nearest support and resistance. Then it estimates reward to risk for long or short planning.

Volatility And Records

ATR is optional, yet useful. It adds a volatility zone around the current price. Large ATR values mean wider stops may be needed. Small ATR values suggest tighter movement. Tick rounding keeps levels aligned with instrument rules.

Practical Notes

Use the output as a planning guide. Confirm levels with chart structure, trend, volume, and news. Do not place trades from one calculation. Record examples in the table. Compare winning and losing setups. Over time, the best method for your market becomes clearer.

Data Consistency

Because electrical pages may track resistance concepts too, use units clearly. For market work, values are prices. For lab comparisons, the same table can store measured thresholds. The important point is consistency. Enter high, low, close, and open from the same session. Do not mix weekly data with daily data. Keep tick size positive when rounding is required. Export the report after each test. Shared records help teams review decisions without recalculating every line. This reduces errors during repeated technical reviews.

FAQs

What does this calculator measure?

It calculates likely support, resistance, pivot, volatility, and risk zones from high, low, open, close, current price, and optional ATR values.

Which inputs are required?

High, low, open, close, and current price are required. ATR, tick size, method, trade side, and decimal places are optional controls.

Why are several methods included?

Different methods react differently to price data. Comparing them helps find clusters where several formulas point near the same price area.

What is tick size?

Tick size is the smallest allowed price step. The calculator rounds levels to that step when you enter a positive tick size.

How does ATR help?

ATR adds volatility context. It creates upper and lower zones around current price, helping you judge whether stops or targets are too tight.

Can I use weekly data?

Yes. Use high, low, open, and close from the same weekly period. Do not mix daily and weekly values in one calculation.

Which method is best?

No method is always best. Test classic, Fibonacci, Woodie, Camarilla, and DeMark levels against your market and time frame.

Is this trading advice?

No. It is a calculation tool. Confirm results with charts, risk controls, market context, and your own decision process.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.