The single most common question from traders moving from NQ/EUR/USD to crypto: do ICT concepts work on BTC? The answer is yes — with specific adaptations. The core mechanisms (AMD, liquidity sweeps, FVGs, order blocks, market structure shifts) apply to any market where large institutional participants execute significant orders. Large participants exist in BTC. They face the same order-execution challenges: how to fill a large position without moving price against themselves. The solution is the same — the Market Maker Model.

What does not transfer directly is the session structure. The London open strategy at 2 AM ET is meaningless for BTC because there is no institutional desk in crypto that closes for the night and reopens at 2 AM. The Asian Range on BTC is too wide to function as a tight reference zone. The kill zone windows need to be rebuilt from the equity correlation rather than copied directly from the forex framework. This guide provides those adaptations.

What Transfers Directly from ICT to Crypto

Works on BTC/ETH ✓ — Same mechanics
AMD cycle — Accumulation, Manipulation, Distribution on daily and weekly timeframes. BTC AMD sequences are often larger in point terms but structurally identical.
Fair Value Gaps — BTC creates FVGs from displacement candles. They fill reliably during US-hours active windows. Higher frequency than NQ due to higher volatility.
Order Blocks — Last-candle-before-significant-move structure works on BTC 15M and 1H charts during US hours. Valid when displacement is strong.
Equal highs/lows — BTC's equal highs and lows sweep violently. Round numbers (50k, 60k, 100k) are the densest stop pools in crypto — treated as the strongest BSL/SSL.
Market structure shifts — MSS on 15M/1H BTC after a liquidity sweep works identically to NQ/ES.
Weekly profile — BTC has a clear weekly AMD. Mon-Tue accumulation, Wed-Thu Judas and distribution, Friday S&D pattern mirrors equity week structure.
Dealing range / premium-discount — BTC premium/discount filter for OBs and FVGs works as well as on NQ when applied on the daily timeframe.
Does NOT transfer directly ✗ — Needs adaptation
London open strategy (2 AM ET) — No institutional BTC desk closes and reopens at 2 AM. The 2 AM window has no special structural significance for BTC.
Asian Range (8 PM–midnight ET) — BTC's overnight range is 3–5× wider than a forex Asian range. Too wide to function as a tight reference zone for London sweeps.
CBDR — No fixed sessions means no Central Bank Dealer Range. Use 24h ATR as a volatility reference instead.
Macro times (2:33 AM, 4:03 AM) — These are equity-and-forex specific. BTC has no algorithmic macro execution at these exact minutes.
Fixed kill zones — There are no BTC-native kill zones. Use equity-overlap pseudo-kill zones instead (see below).
Silver Bullet 10–11 AM (for standalone BTC) — The Silver Bullet window's significance comes from equity session overlap. Valid for BTC only when NQ is active in the same window.

BTC Pseudo-Kill Zones — Trading Equity Overlap Windows

Since BTC has no native session structure, the highest-probability BTC trading windows are derived from equity market overlap — when US institutional participants are active in NQ and ES, they are also active in BTC, DXY, and broader risk assets. BTC's volume profile peaks sharply at the NY open and declines through the afternoon, mirroring the equity market's session structure.

8:30–11 AM ET
Primary BTC window — NY open overlap. The highest institutional participation window for BTC. AMD structure is most reliable. FVGs from this window hold. MSS signals have the highest follow-through rate. This is BTC's equivalent of NQ's NY kill zone. The BTC Judas Swing most commonly fires in the first 30 minutes (8:30–9:00 AM ET). Best BTC setups of the day form here. Treat it with the same entry discipline as NQ's kill zone.
1:30–4 PM ET
Secondary BTC window — PM session overlap. US equity PM session. Lower probability than morning but valid BTC setups form here, particularly on high-momentum days. The 2:00 PM ET window sees increased volume in risk assets if there are Fed-related events. Watch for BTC dead zone range Judas (same logic as NQ dead zone) after the 11 AM–1:30 PM low-volume period.
2–5 AM ET
European overlap — valid on high-vol weeks. European institutional crypto desks are active during London hours. BTC AMD setups in this window occur more frequently during high-volatility macro weeks (FOMC weeks, major BTC-specific news). On average weeks, this window has lower setup quality than the NY primary. Never replace the NY window with this one — treat it as a supplementary opportunity only.
11 AM–1:30 PM ET
BTC dead zone — same logic as NQ. US equity lunch. BTC volume drops 30–50% relative to the morning session. False breaks, low-conviction moves, and stop-hunting without follow-through. Apply the same dead zone rules: no new entries, mark the dead zone range high/low as PM session S&D targets, resume at 1:30 PM ET.

Funding Rate Sweeps — Crypto's Native Liquidity Event

Perpetual futures exchanges (Binance, OKX, Bybit) charge funding rates every 8 hours — at 00:00, 08:00, and 16:00 UTC. Funding is a payment from longs to shorts (positive funding) or shorts to longs (negative funding) based on the divergence between the perpetual price and the spot price. Extreme funding rates create the most predictable liquidity sweeps in crypto.

When funding is strongly positive (above +0.1% per 8-hour period), long-side leverage is at elevated levels. The exchange's participants have an incentive to see price decline before the funding payment — liquidating leveraged longs generates more activity and fees, and the algorithm can sweep those longs as counterparty liquidity. This creates a predictable pre-funding sweep pattern:

High positive funding → pre-funding bearish sweep: In the 1–2 hours before the 08:00 UTC or 16:00 UTC funding payment, price often makes a sharp move against the heavily funded direction. For high positive funding, this means a bearish sweep of recent equal lows — collecting leveraged long liquidations — before the funding payment and a subsequent reversal. This is the crypto-native Judas Swing: the manipulation phase triggered by funding mechanics rather than pure institutional order filling.

High negative funding → pre-funding bullish sweep: The mirror. Short-side leverage is elevated. A bullish sweep of recent equal highs before the funding window collects short liquidations. Price then reverses after the funding payment.

In ICT terms: extreme funding creates a predictable Phase 2 (Manipulation) event at known times. The 08:00 UTC (4 AM ET) and 16:00 UTC (noon ET) funding windows produce the most tradeable sweeps because they align with pre-market and early afternoon equity activity. Identifying the funding rate extreme (above +0.1% or below -0.05%), the dense stop pool on the funded side, and the upcoming funding window creates a setup analogous to identifying the Judas Swing target before the London open on EUR/USD.

BTC Daily AMD — NY Open Pseudo-Kill Zone + Funding Rate Sweep Overnight range builds · 8:30 AM ET Judas sweeps overnight low · displacement · FVG entry · PM delivery
Overnight 12AM–8AM NY Open 8:30–11AM Dead Zone 11–1:30PM PM Session 1:30–4PM Overnight HIGH — BSL Overnight LOW — SSL (Judas target) T1 — IRL 8:30AM Judas FVG Long entry FVG 50% CE Dead zone — no entries T1 hit
BTC daily AMD with pseudo-kill zones: overnight consolidation (midnight–8:30 AM ET) builds the range with the overnight low as the SSL Judas target. At 8:30 AM ET (NY open), BTC's Judas sweeps the overnight low — the same mechanism as NQ's NY open Judas. MSS fires, displacement creates a bullish FVG. Long entry at FVG 50% CE. Dead zone 11 AM–1:30 PM produces chop. PM session delivers to T1 (overnight high, the BSL). The structure is identical to NQ AMD — only the session timing reference differs.

BTC Weekly Profile — Same AMD on a Larger Scale

BTC's weekly profile mirrors the equity weekly structure closely. Monday and Tuesday accumulate. Wednesday often produces the weekly Judas Swing. Thursday and Friday distribute. The weekly equal highs and lows from the prior week's range are the most important BSL/SSL pools for the following week.

The Wednesday Judas on BTC is particularly well-defined during trending weeks. On a bullish BTC week, Wednesday produces a bearish move below Tuesday's low — sweeping the mid-week SSL before reversing aggressively into Thursday's and Friday's bullish distribution. This Wednesday sweep is predictable enough that experienced ICT crypto traders prepare for it specifically on Tuesday evenings.

Weekly profile application on BTC requires a longer lookback than NQ. BTC's average weekly range is often 8–15% — versus NQ's 2–4%. This means the dealing range calculations and premium/discount assessments are based on wider percentage swings. Use the percentage-based dealing range rather than point-based when working with BTC: calculate EQ as the midpoint percentage of the weekly range rather than a fixed-point reference.

NQ/BTC Correlation — Using Equity Markets for BTC Bias

BTC and NQ are positively correlated risk assets. When institutional participants are risk-on (buying equities), they typically also buy BTC. When risk-off (selling equities), BTC follows. This correlation makes NQ's daily and weekly bias one of the most reliable BTC bias filters available.

Workflow for BTC bias using NQ correlation:

Step 1: Determine NQ's daily and weekly bias (from daily dealing range, weekly profile, IPDA direction). If NQ is bullish (price at discount, weekly draw on BSL), BTC bias defaults to bullish.

Step 2: Check for SMT divergence between NQ and BTC at the weekly or daily level. If NQ makes a new weekly high but BTC does not confirm it — BTC fails to make a corresponding new high — this divergence suggests BTC is weaker than NQ's price action implies. The divergence warns against aggressive BTC longs even in a bullish NQ context.

Step 3: Check BTC dominance (BTC.D) on TradingView. High and rising BTC dominance means capital is flowing into BTC relative to altcoins — a bullish BTC signal independent of the NQ correlation. Falling BTC dominance during a risk-on equity rally means capital is rotating from BTC to altcoins — a sign to moderate BTC long sizing even in a bullish NQ environment.

The correlation breaks down during crypto-specific events: ETF approval news, exchange collapses, regulatory announcements, and BTC halving cycles. These events create BTC moves that are uncorrelated or inversely correlated with NQ. When a known crypto-specific catalyst is in play, the NQ correlation filter is suspended — use BTC-specific structure only.

Weekend NWOG — BTC's Most Reliable Gap Setup

The New Week Opening Gap (NWOG) applies to BTC with higher frequency than any other ICT concept because BTC trades through the weekend when equity markets are closed. Every Friday at 4 PM ET, the NQ and ES markets close. BTC continues to trade. By Sunday 6 PM ET (when equity futures reopen), BTC has often moved — creating a gap between the Friday equity close price context and the Sunday reopen.

For BTC specifically, the most relevant gap is the difference between BTC's Friday 4 PM ET price and its Sunday 6 PM ET price. If BTC rallied over the weekend, the Sunday open creates a gap above Friday's close — a bullish NWOG that is likely to fill (price returning to Friday close) during the early Monday session. If BTC fell over the weekend, the gap is bearish — likely to fill Monday morning.

The BTC weekend NWOG has an exceptionally high fill rate relative to equity NWOGs because BTC's weekend moves are often driven by lower-volume positioning — easier to reverse when institutional participants return Monday. Weekend moves on low volume are the crypto equivalent of the Asian session's low-volume range: prime material for Monday's Judas Swing to sweep and reverse.

Trading the BTC NWOG: If BTC opened Monday significantly above Friday's 4 PM close (NWOG above), watch for the Monday Judas to sweep the NWOG high before delivering bearishly toward the gap fill at Friday's close. If below (NWOG below), watch for Monday to sweep the NWOG low before delivering bullishly back to Friday's close. The gap fill is T1. The weekly AMD target is T2.

BTC Weekend NWOG — Gap Fill as Monday T1 Friday 4PM ET close · Weekend rally creates gap above · Monday Judas sweeps gap high · MSS · entry · gap fill T1
Friday (mkt open) Weekend (BTC only) Monday session Tue–Thu distribution Friday 4PM close — NWOG level (Gap fill T1) Weekend high — BSL (Monday Judas target) Stop Weekend rally (low volume) NWOG gap (gap fill target = Friday close) Mon Judas Short entry FVG 50% CE T1 = gap fill
BTC weekend NWOG setup: BTC rallies over the weekend on low volume, creating a gap above Friday's 4 PM ET close. The gap creates BSL (buy stops above the weekend high). Monday's session opens and the Judas Swing sweeps the weekend high — collecting the BSL. MSS fires. FVG entry short. T1 is the Friday close (gap fill). The gap fill rate for BTC NWOG setups is high because weekend moves on low volume are easily reversed when institutional equity participants return Monday morning.

BTC vs ETH — Which Applies ICT Better

ETH follows BTC structurally but with amplified volatility — typically 1.3–1.8× BTC's percentage moves. The ICT concepts that work on BTC work on ETH, with a few additional considerations:

ETH AMD is noisier than BTC. ETH's higher beta means its AMD sequences have more whipsaws within each phase. The Judas Swing on ETH often extends further beyond the sweep level before reversing — where BTC might take out a level by 0.5%, ETH may take it out by 1.5%. This means wider stops are necessary on ETH relative to its price, making the percentage-based stop rule even more critical.

BTC/ETH SMT divergence is a powerful intraday tool. When BTC and ETH make equal highs or lows simultaneously, the level has double the stop-pool density — both BTC traders and ETH traders have stops at the same relative price point. When only one of the two makes a new high while the other fails to confirm, the divergence signals weakness in the move and elevates the probability of a reversal. This BTC/ETH SMT is used the same way as the NQ/ES SMT — both are risk-correlated pairs, and their divergence is the signal.

For beginners to ICT crypto: start with BTC only. BTC has the highest liquidity, the most consistent AMD structure during US hours, and the clearest relationship with NQ. Once BTC ICT setups are working consistently in a journal, expand to ETH. Never trade altcoins using ICT concepts alone — the liquidity is too thin for institutional order-flow based analysis, and the moves are dominated by narrative rather than algorithmic delivery.

FVGs and Order Blocks on BTC — Practical Notes

FVGs form on BTC at high frequency because BTC's volatility produces displacement candles more often than NQ or EUR/USD per session. This is a double-edged property: more FVGs mean more potential entries, but also more low-quality FVGs that fail. The displacement quality check (body-to-range ratio above 75%) is even more important on BTC than on NQ — BTC's wick-heavy candles during off-hours produce many apparent FVGs with poor institutional backing.

Best-quality BTC FVGs: Form during the NY open window (8:30–11 AM ET), created by a displacement candle with a strong body ratio, in the correct weekly dealing range zone (discount for bullish, premium for bearish). These FVGs fill reliably within the same session or the following session. Off-hours BTC FVGs (midnight to 8 AM ET) have lower fill reliability and should be treated as B-tier regardless of apparent displacement quality.

Order blocks on BTC are most reliable on the 1H and 4H timeframes. The 15M OB can work within the NY open window, but outside that window, 15M BTC OBs have higher failure rates due to lower liquidity. For BTC OBs, the confirmation requirement is stricter than NQ: require a strong displacement candle (90%+ body ratio) following the OB, and only trade during active equity hours.

Full Walkthrough — BTC Daily AMD (Bullish Week)

Sunday context: Bullish weekly profile. BTC in weekly discount (prior week closed at 82,400 after a bearish correction from 91,200). NQ weekly profile also bullish. Draw on liquidity: weekly equal highs at 91,200. Monday expected to accumulate. Wednesday: Judas Swing below Monday low, then bullish delivery.

Monday 9:30 AM ET: BTC opens at 82,800. NY open. Watch for Judas below Monday overnight low (82,200). BTC dips to 82,040 at 9:44 AM — sweeping overnight low by 160 points. Body closes at 82,310. SSL swept. Bullish MSS at 9:52 AM. FVG: 82,240–82,760. 50% CE: 82,500. Long limit placed at 82,500. Fills 10:08 AM. Stop 81,980. Distance: 520 points.

T1: Friday prior week high 84,800 — 2,300 pts, 4.4R. Hit Monday 2:48 PM. Stop to BE.
T2 runner: Weekly equal highs 91,200 — 8,700 pts from entry. Hit Thursday 11:22 AM.

BTC Daily AMD Long — Monday 10:08 AM ET
Context
Bullish weekly · NQ also bullish · BTC at weekly discount · draw on 91,200 BSL
Judas sweep
9:44 AM · BTC dips 82,040 (–160 below overnight low 82,200) · body closes 82,310 · SSL swept ✓
Entry
Long 82,500 (FVG 50% CE) · 10:08 AM NY open window · Stop 81,980 (520 pts)
T1
84,800 (prior week high) · 2,300 pts · 4.4R · Mon 2:48 PM · stop to BE
T2 runner
91,200 (weekly equal highs BSL) · 8,700 pts · Thursday 11:22 AM

Common ICT Crypto Mistakes

Applying London open timing to BTC. The most common error when transitioning from forex to BTC ICT. BTC has no 2 AM ET institutional event. Setting up a BTC London open trade at 2 AM using the Asian Range high as the Judas target produces setups that occasionally work by accident but have no structural institutional basis. Replace London open timing entirely with the NY open (8:30 AM ET) for BTC.

Using Asian Range too narrowly. Marking BTC's Asian Range the same way as EUR/USD — as a tight 8 PM–midnight ET range — misses the point. BTC's overnight range is wide and multi-directional. The useful overnight reference is the full midnight–8:30 AM range, and even that is wider than the forex Asian Range. Do not expect the forex-style tight Asian Range H/L to serve as precise Judas targets on BTC.

Ignoring funding rates. Extreme funding rates on BTC perpetuals create the most predictable short-term liquidity sweeps in crypto. Checking funding on Coinglass or a similar aggregator takes 30 seconds and provides a significant edge filter. Above +0.08% (positive): expect a pre-funding bearish sweep. Below -0.04% (negative): expect a pre-funding bullish sweep. Ignoring this adds avoidable noise to BTC setups.

Not adjusting for BTC's higher volatility in stop placement. A standard NQ stop of 50 points is approximately 0.24% of NQ's price at 21,000. The same 0.24% on BTC at 85,000 is approximately 204 points. Copying stop distances from NQ to BTC in absolute terms produces stops that are too tight and get taken by normal BTC noise. Always convert stop distances to percentage terms when moving between instruments. A practical rule: use 0.3–0.5% of BTC's current price as your standard stop distance for 15M setups during the NY open window. At 85,000, this is 255–425 points. At 70,000, this is 210–350 points. This scaling ensures your stops breathe with BTC's volatility rather than getting taken by normal price noise.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do ICT concepts work on crypto (BTC/ETH)?
Yes — AMD, FVGs, order blocks, liquidity sweeps, market structure, and weekly profile all apply to BTC and ETH. The mechanics are identical because large participants face the same order-execution challenges in crypto as in forex. The key adaptation: replace session-based kill zones (London open, Asian Range) with equity-overlap windows. The NY open (8:30–11 AM ET) is BTC's primary trading window.
What are the best hours to trade BTC using ICT?
Primary: 8:30–11:00 AM ET (NY open overlap). This is when institutional equity participants are active in NQ/ES and also in BTC — the highest AMD reliability window. Secondary: 1:30–4:00 PM ET (PM session). Avoid: 11 AM–1:30 PM ET (BTC dead zone, same as NQ). The 2–5 AM ET window can produce setups during high-volatility weeks but is lower priority on average.
What is a funding rate sweep in ICT crypto?
Extreme perpetual funding rates (above +0.1% or below -0.04%) create pre-funding liquidity sweeps. High positive funding means heavy long leverage — the algorithm sweeps recent equal lows before the funding payment to liquidate longs, collecting that SSL as counterparty volume before reversing. This is the crypto-native Judas Swing, triggered by funding mechanics at known 8-hour intervals (00:00, 08:00, 16:00 UTC).
How do you use NQ/BTC correlation for bias?
NQ daily and weekly bias defaults BTC in the same direction. If NQ is confirmed bullish (price at discount, draw on BSL), BTC bias is bullish. Check for SMT divergence: if NQ makes a new high but BTC doesn't confirm, the divergence warns against aggressive BTC longs. Also check BTC dominance (BTC.D): rising dominance = bullish BTC signal independent of NQ. Correlation breaks during crypto-specific catalysts — use BTC structure only in those cases.
Does the NWOG concept apply to BTC?
Yes — and with higher frequency than equities because BTC trades through the weekend while equity markets are closed. The BTC weekend NWOG is the gap between Friday 4 PM ET price and Sunday 6 PM ET price. If BTC rallied on the weekend, the Monday Judas Swing typically sweeps the weekend high (BSL) before delivering back toward the Friday close (gap fill = T1). Weekend moves occur on low volume and have a high reversal rate when institutional participants return Monday.
ICT crypto in four rules

1 — AMD, FVG, OB, liquidity sweeps all transfer. What does not: London open, Asian Range (too wide), CBDR, macro times. Replace with equity-overlap windows. 2 — Primary BTC window: 8:30–11 AM ET (NY open). This is BTC's kill zone. 3 — Check funding rates: extreme positive funding → pre-funding bearish sweep; extreme negative → bullish sweep. 4 — Use NQ bias as BTC bias default. Check SMT divergence for exceptions. Adjust all stop distances to percentage terms, not absolute points.

← Core framework
ICT AMD — the cycle that drives BTC as much as NQ