ICT articles across the community use the word "displacement" constantly. The MSS fires with a displacement candle. The FVG is created by displacement. The entry is into the zone left by the displacement. But the concept itself — what displacement actually is, how to recognise it, and critically how to judge its quality — rarely gets its own explanation.
This article fills that gap. Displacement is the engine of every ICT entry. Once you understand what a quality displacement looks like — and what a weak one looks like — you will start to see immediately why some FVG setups hold perfectly and others get run through on the first retrace. The candle quality is the answer.
What ICT Displacement Is
Displacement is a large, fast, one-directional candle — or a rapid sequence of 2–3 candles — that moves price aggressively away from a prior range and leaves an imbalance behind. It is the candle that creates the Fair Value Gap. In the three-candle FVG structure (C1 → C2 → C3), displacement is C2 — the large middle candle whose momentum was so strong that the wicks of C1 and C3 do not overlap, leaving a gap zone between them.
Three characteristics define a genuine displacement candle:
How Displacement Creates the FVG
The relationship between displacement and the Fair Value Gap is not metaphorical — they are the same event viewed from two perspectives. The displacement is the active view (what happened to price); the FVG is the passive view (what was left behind).
In the three-candle FVG sequence: Candle 1 is the last candle before the displacement. Candle 2 is the displacement candle. Candle 3 is the first candle after the displacement. The FVG exists in the zone between C1's close and C3's open — the price range that C2 passed through so rapidly that no two-sided trading occurred there. C2 is the propulsion block — its body spans the FVG, and its 50% midpoint (the mean threshold) is the primary entry level.
The size and quality of the displacement directly determines the size and quality of the FVG:
A large, body-dominant displacement creates a wide FVG with a clear 50% CE level, high institutional order density within the zone, and strong probability of holding on the first retrace. A small, wick-heavy displacement creates a narrow or low-quality FVG that is more likely to be breached on the retrace — producing the false fill that stops traders out before the real delivery begins.
This is why FVG quality assessment in ICT always begins with displacement quality assessment. Before marking a FVG as an entry zone, check the candle that created it. If C2 was weak, downgrade or skip the FVG regardless of the structural context.
Strong vs Weak Displacement — Practical Filter
The body-to-range ratio is not an arbitrary threshold — it reflects the consistency of institutional order flow throughout the candle's lifespan. A 95% body ratio means price moved in one direction for nearly the entire candle duration. No reversal, no hesitation, no opposing orders powerful enough to extend a wick. This is what institutional conviction looks like at the candle scale. The algorithm was deploying orders consistently throughout that candle with no meaningful opposition.
A 45% body ratio on a large candle tells a different story. Price moved aggressively in one direction (creating a large wick) but was pushed back significantly before the candle closed. The wicks represent opposing institutional orders that absorbed part of the move. If a significant wick forms in the direction of the intended displacement, it means a meaningful portion of the displacement range was contested and retraced within the same candle. The FVG that forms from such a candle reflects this contested movement — the "imbalance" is real but shallower than a clean body-dominant displacement.
The practical consequence: a FVG created by a 90% body-ratio displacement tends to hold on the first retrace because the institutional orders that created the displacement are concentrated through almost the entire candle body. The institutional "interest zone" is dense. A FVG from a 45% body displacement is more likely to see price blow through the 50% CE on the first retrace, stopping out the entry before the delivery resumes — because the institutional density inside that candle was already partially contested by the wicks.
Displacement vs Spike — The Body/Wick Distinction
The most common misidentification in ICT trading is treating a spike (large wick, small body) as a displacement. They are structurally opposite and produce different entry structures:
Displacement: Large body, small wicks. The candle opened and moved strongly in one direction throughout its lifespan — institutional orders were flowing consistently in that direction for the full duration of the candle. The resulting FVG has dense institutional order fill inside it. Entry at the FVG 50% CE has the highest-probability hold.
Spike (Rejection Block candle): Large wick, small body. The candle extended aggressively in one direction but reversed before closing — the wick swept a liquidity level and was rejected. This produces a rejection block (the wick range) rather than a high-quality FVG. The FVG produced by a spike candle is typically narrow (because the body is small) and lower probability.
The practical implication: when a large wick candle sweeps a prior high, check the body. If the body is small and closed back inside the range — the wick is the sweep, the body is inside range — this is an inducement candle, and you enter the rejection block or the FVG that forms after the next displacement. If the candle has a large body that closes beyond the level — that is displacement and the FVG it creates is the entry zone.
Displacement in the MSS Sequence
Within the ICT entry sequence, displacement is the third event after the liquidity sweep. The full sequence:
1. Liquidity sweep: Price extends beyond a BSL or SSL level, collecting the stop orders. This may produce a spike candle (wick extending, body closing back inside — the inducement candle).
2. Market Structure Shift: A prior swing point on the 5M or 15M is broken. The MSS candle itself is often small — it is the structure shift, not the displacement.
3. Displacement candle: The large body-dominant candle that fires immediately after or during the MSS, moving price aggressively in the true direction. This creates the FVG that becomes the entry zone.
4. Retrace to FVG: Price retraces into the displacement's FVG. Entry at 50% CE (or IOFED trigger for active management).
The displacement is step 3. It is the candle that produces the tradeable entry zone. Without a quality displacement at step 3, there is no high-quality entry — there is only an MSS with a weak FVG that is more likely to be breached than to hold.
Displacement Across Multiple Timeframes
Displacement operates at every timeframe simultaneously, and the relationship between timeframes determines both entry precision and target depth. The key principle: a higher-timeframe displacement creates the zone; a lower-timeframe confirmation creates the entry.
15M displacement → 5M entry: The 15-minute displacement candle creates a wide 15M FVG. Within that wide zone, the 5-minute chart shows the retrace entering the zone. The IOFED 1-minute trigger fires when the retrace stalls inside the 15M FVG. The 15M displacement gave you the zone; the 1M confirmed the entry timing.
Stacking: When displacement is visible on both the 15M and 5M simultaneously — a 15M displacement that also contains a 5M displacement within it — the FVG quality is elevated significantly. The 15M displacement ensures the institutional order flow is real; the 5M displacement provides the specific entry zone within it. This is sometimes called a "nested FVG" — a higher-timeframe FVG with a refined lower-timeframe entry within it.
Daily displacement: When the daily chart produces a displacement candle — a single daily bar that is 2–4× larger than recent daily candles with a large body — the resulting daily FVG is a multi-session target. The retrace to fill a daily FVG may take 1–3 sessions. Intraday entries that align with a retrace into a daily displacement FVG have the highest-timeframe institutional context of any ICT setup.
A concrete multi-timeframe stacking example: on a bearish Monday, the 15-minute chart shows a single large bearish displacement candle from 9:30–9:45 AM that covers 280 NQ points with a 91% body ratio. This candle creates a 15M FVG spanning 21,580–21,720. On the 5-minute chart, within the same time window, two sequential bearish candles both have body ratios above 80% — these are 5M displacement candles nested inside the 15M displacement. The 5M FVG (21,602–21,690) is narrower and sits within the 15M FVG. The entry is at the 5M FVG 50% CE (21,646), which also falls inside the 15M FVG zone. Both timeframes confirm the same entry level, each with its own displacement-quality evidence. This is the highest-probability displacement entry: multi-timeframe institutional conviction aligned at the same price zone.
What to do when timeframes disagree: a strong 5M displacement (90% body ratio) inside a 15M candle that was weak (45% body ratio on the 15M chart) is a below-average setup. The 5M entry has structural validity but the 15M context is contested. Trade at half size or wait for a cleaner alignment in a subsequent session.
Full Walkthrough — NQ Displacement and FVG Entry
Reading a displacement candle in real time — before the candle closes — requires discipline. During the candle's progress, a large bearish candle printing live may look like a spike. You must wait for the close to measure the body-to-range ratio. The common error is entering the FVG limit order while the displacement candle is still printing. If the candle closes with a large wick (because it partially retraced), your limit may already be inside a degraded FVG. The rule: mark the FVG only after the displacement candle closes. Then measure body-to-range. Then set the limit.
Setup: Daily bias bearish. BSL at prior day's high: 21,620. CBDR range 21,520–21,580. Plan: watch for NY open Judas above 21,620 followed by a displacement candle.
9:30 AM — Sweep: NQ spikes to 21,644. Candle body closes at 21,598 — body inside prior day's range. Sweep confirmed.
9:36 AM — Displacement fires: A single 5-minute candle opens at 21,598, closes at 21,446. Range: 152 points. Body: 152 points minus 8 points of wicks = 144 points of body. Body-to-range ratio: 95%. This is a maximum-quality displacement candle. C1 close: 21,598. C3 opens at 21,434. FVG: 21,434–21,598. Width: 164 points. 50% CE: 21,516.
9:48 AM — Retrace: Price rebounds to 21,522 inside the FVG. Short limit fills at 21,516 (50% CE). Stop above sweep wick: 21,644 + buffer = 21,652. Distance: 136 points.
T1: PDL at 21,320 — 196 points, 1.4R. Hit 10:52 AM. Close 50%, stop to BE.
T2: Weekly equal lows at 21,040 — 476 points, 3.5R. Hit Thursday 11:08 AM.
Scoring Displacement Quality — A Practical Checklist
Rather than making a binary pass/fail judgment on displacement, experienced ICT traders score it across multiple dimensions and use the score to size the trade. A setup with maximum-quality displacement gets standard or larger size; a setup with marginal displacement gets reduced size or a skip.
Criterion 1 — Body-to-range ratio: Measure open-to-close as a percentage of high-to-low. Above 80% = 2 points. 65–80% = 1 point. Below 65% = 0 points.
Criterion 2 — Relative size: Compare C2 to the average of the preceding 5 candles' ranges. More than 3× average = 2 points. 2–3× average = 1 point. Less than 2× = 0 points.
Criterion 3 — C3 confirmation: Does C3 continue in the displacement direction (not immediately reverse into C2's body)? Yes = 2 points. C3 is flat/small = 1 point. C3 reverses into C2 = 0 points.
Criterion 4 — Liquidity sweep preceded it: Was there a clear BSL or SSL sweep before the displacement? Clear sweep = 2 points. Ambiguous = 1 point. No sweep = 0 points.
Criterion 5 — Kill zone timing: Did the displacement form during an active kill zone (London 2–5 AM ET, NY open 8:30–11 AM ET)? Yes = 2 points. Within 30 minutes of KZ = 1 point. Outside = 0 points.
Maximum score: 10 points. 8–10: A-tier setup, standard or larger size. 5–7: B-tier, reduce size to 50%. Below 5: skip or paper trade only.
This scoring approach prevents over-filtering (dismissing every setup that is not perfect) and under-filtering (taking every FVG regardless of displacement quality). The score gives you a calibrated size decision rather than a binary yes/no.
Displacement and Timeframe Alignment
The strongest ICT setups have displacement visible across at least two timeframes simultaneously. A 5-minute displacement candle that is also a significant candle on the 15-minute chart (where it stands out relative to the 15M context) is a higher-probability entry than a 5M displacement that appears insignificant on the 15M. The higher-timeframe context validates the lower-timeframe displacement.
Practical workflow: first confirm displacement on your execution timeframe (5M). Then check the immediately higher timeframe (15M). If the 5M displacement candle is also visually prominent on the 15M — the entire 5M displacement occurs within a single 15M candle that is large relative to recent 15M candles — the displacement has multi-timeframe institutional backing. If the 5M displacement appears as a minor blip on the 15M, it may be noise rather than genuine institutional order flow, and the FVG it creates carries less weight.
Daily displacement is the most powerful. When a daily candle is 2–3× larger than recent daily candles with a dominant body, the entire daily range forms a massive FVG on the intraday charts. Intraday retraces into a daily displacement FVG are the highest-timeframe alignment available in the ICT framework — the intraday entry has the institutional backing of the daily delivery candle behind it.
Common Displacement Mistakes
Treating any large candle as displacement. A large wick candle is not a displacement candle — it is a spike. Check the body-to-range ratio before calling it displacement. A 200-point NQ candle with 150 points of wick and 50 points of body is not displacement; it is a spike that may have swept a liquidity level. The FVG it creates (if any) will be narrow and unreliable. Only large-body, small-wick candles qualify.
Entering the FVG without checking displacement quality. Every FVG entry should begin with checking the C2 displacement candle. If C2 was weak, the FVG is low priority. This one check filters out a significant proportion of FVG blow-throughs. The checklist: Was C2 significantly larger than surrounding candles? Was the body-to-range ratio above ~70%? Did C3 confirm (rather than immediately reverse)? All three yes = enter with standard size. Any no = reduce size or skip.
Confusing displacement with the sweep candle. The sweep candle (the inducement spike that sweeps the BSL or SSL) and the displacement candle are different events in the sequence. The sweep candle is typically a large-wick, small-body candle — it extended to sweep the stops and closed back inside. The displacement candle fires after the sweep, creating the FVG. Entering the sweep wick as if it were a displacement produces entries at the wrong level with the wrong direction.
Not accounting for displacement on the higher timeframe. A 5M FVG created by a 5M displacement is a valid entry zone. But if the 15M or 1H chart shows no displacement in that area — the 5M displacement happened inside what is just noise on the higher timeframe — the entry is lower priority. Always check whether the displacement that created your entry FVG is also visible (or at least consistent with) the higher-timeframe structure.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is ICT Displacement?
How does displacement create a Fair Value Gap?
What makes a displacement candle strong vs weak?
What is the difference between displacement and a spike?
Where does displacement occur in the ICT entry sequence?
1 — Displacement = large body, small wicks, significantly bigger than surrounding candles. It creates the FVG. 2 — Quality test: body-to-range ratio above ~75% = A-tier FVG. Below ~60% = downgrade or skip. 3 — Displacement is step 3 in the sequence: sweep → MSS → displacement → retrace to FVG. 4 — Displacement is not the spike/wick candle (that is the sweep). It is the body-dominant candle that fires after the sweep and creates the tradeable zone.