Every ICT concept that applies to NQ and forex applies to gold. The AMD sequence, the kill zone timing, the fair value gap entry, the liquidity sweep logic — all of it transfers directly. But gold is not just a bigger forex pair. It has its own session character, its own SMT divergence relationship, its own news event profile, and its own set of quirks that experienced gold traders learn to work with rather than against.
This guide covers everything that is specific to trading gold with ICT. If you are already familiar with the core ICT framework, this is the translation layer. If you are newer to ICT, start with the beginner guide first, then return here when you understand the foundational concepts.
Why Gold Works Well With ICT
Gold (XAU/USD) is one of the most institutionally-driven markets in the world. Central banks, sovereign wealth funds, and large commodity houses all participate in gold markets, meaning the order flow that ICT teaches you to read is present and dominant. There are no periods where retail flow drives the price — the market is too large and too liquid for retail to matter at all. This makes it an excellent ICT market.
The practical consequence: gold's ICT setups tend to be clean and decisive. When a Judas Swing occurs on gold, it completes clearly — the wick is visible, the MSS is sharp, and the distribution move follows through without the choppy back-and-forth you sometimes see on lower-liquidity instruments. Gold does not hesitate once it has direction.
Gold also has one of the highest volatilities among liquid markets. The average daily range on XAU/USD is 1,500–2,500 pips in standard forex pip terms (or $15–25 per ounce movement). This means FVGs are wider, targets are larger, and R:R ratios on the same percentage stop can be significantly higher than on EUR/USD. A 2R trade on EUR/USD and a 2R trade on gold involve similar percentage account risk — but the gold trade may have more absolute price movement to work with, which makes the setup easier to identify.
The important adjustment: because the numbers are bigger, you must think in terms of percentages and R:R rather than fixed pip amounts. A 400-pip stop on gold is not the same as a 400-pip stop on EUR/USD — gold's 400 pips is a much smaller percentage of the price. Always size gold positions based on the percentage risk, not the nominal pip distance.
Gold's Session Personality
Gold does not behave identically across the three main trading sessions. Understanding how gold moves in each session is the foundation for using ICT timing effectively on XAU/USD.
The single most important session note for gold traders: the London fix at 10:30 AM London time (5:30 AM ET). This is when the LBMA (London Bullion Market Association) sets the official gold benchmark price. In the 15–30 minutes around the London fix, gold often makes a sharp directional move — sometimes reversing a prior London session trend. If you are in a London session gold trade and approaching 5:30 AM ET, be aware that the fix can interrupt the AMD delivery. Either take partials before the fix or ensure your stop is beyond a level that a fix-related move cannot easily reach.
AMD on Gold — The Daily Sequence
The AMD sequence on gold follows the same logic as every other liquid market — accumulation in the Asian session, manipulation in London, distribution in New York — but with gold-specific timing and magnitude.
Accumulation (6 PM–2 AM ET): Gold consolidates in its Asian range. The range is typically tighter than the average daily range — 300–600 pips on a normal day. Mark the Asian High and Asian Low clearly. These are the primary targets for the London Judas Swing. On days with high geopolitical tension or pending economic releases, the Asian range may widen and the Judas Swing will extend further to clear the larger stop cluster.
Manipulation (2–3:30 AM ET): The London Judas Swing fires on gold, typically within the first 60–90 minutes of the London open. On a bearish day, gold rallies above the Asian High — sweeping buy-side liquidity (stop-loss orders from shorts, breakout buy orders from retail) before reversing sharply lower. The Judas extension on gold is characteristically large — 200–600 pips above the Asian High is normal, not unusual. This is not a failed trade or an overrun. It is gold's normal sweep magnitude. Stop placement must account for the full extension: stops go above the actual wick high, not the Asian High itself.
Distribution (8:30 AM–1 PM ET): The New York session delivers the true directional move. After London's Judas Swing and MSS, the NY session runs price to the daily target — the opposing liquidity pool (prior day's low for a bearish day, prior day's high for a bullish day). The Silver Bullet window (10–11 AM ET) is particularly reliable on gold — the 10:00–10:30 AM window often provides the first or second strong push in the distribution direction after any minor retrace. On news days, the 8:30 AM candle often begins the distribution immediately.
DXY as the SMT Pair — Gold's Most Reliable Confirmation
Every liquid market in ICT has an SMT (Smart Money Tool) divergence pair — a correlated instrument that confirms or contradicts a move. For NQ and ES, the pair is each other. For EUR/USD and GBP/USD, it's the dollar relationship. For gold, the primary SMT pair is the US Dollar Index (DXY).
Gold and the dollar are inversely correlated. When the dollar strengthens, gold typically weakens — and vice versa. The relationship exists because gold is priced in US dollars: a stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for foreign buyers, reducing demand. The correlation is not perfect and breaks down during specific risk events (geopolitical crises, where gold and dollar can rise together), but on a typical trading day, the inverse relationship is consistent enough to use as an SMT signal.
The SMT divergence on gold works like this:
If gold sweeps above a prior high (taking BSL) — but DXY fails to make a new swing low at the same time — the gold move is suspect. A genuine bullish push on gold should correspond to a genuine breakdown in DXY. When gold reaches new highs but DXY stays firm, institutions are not genuinely buying gold — they are sweeping gold liquidity before pushing lower.
Conversely: if gold sweeps below a prior low (taking SSL) — but DXY fails to make a new swing high — the bearish gold move is suspect and a bullish reversal is likely.
In practice: open DXY on a separate chart panel whenever trading gold. When the gold Judas Swing fires, immediately check DXY. If the Judas direction is bearish on gold (sweep above Asian High), DXY should be failing to make a new low simultaneously. That divergence confirmation — gold new high, DXY not new low — is the highest-probability entry signal available on XAU/USD.
The Gold Judas Swing — Why It Extends Further
The single biggest adjustment ICT traders need to make when moving from forex to gold is the Judas Swing extension. On EUR/USD, a Judas Swing typically extends 10–30 pips beyond the Asian High or equal highs before reversing. On gold, that same sweep extends 200–600 pips. This is not unusual or a sign the setup is failing — it is gold's normal operating range.
The reason: gold's stop clusters are proportionally further from key levels than forex. A retail trader with a short position on gold will place their stop 50–100 pips above the swing high — not 10 pips as on EUR/USD. Because more stops are distributed further from the level, the sweep needs to extend further to trigger all of them before institutional selling can absorb the buying and reverse price.
Practical implications for your trade execution on XAU/USD:
Never place a stop at the Asian High. The Judas Swing will run through it — that is the point. The stop goes above the actual wick high of the Judas candle, with 10–20 pips of additional buffer. If the Asian High is at 2,385 and the Judas wick reaches 2,393, the stop goes at 2,395 minimum.
Wait for the full wick to form before entering. On EUR/USD, the Judas Swing completes in 1–3 candles on the 5-minute chart. On gold, the sweep can unfold over 3–8 candles before the wick is clearly formed and the body closes back inside the range. Entering before the wick completes on gold is entering before the manipulation is finished — the position will be underwater during the remainder of the sweep.
The R:R is still excellent despite the wider stop. Because gold's targets (the opposing liquidity pool) are also proportionally larger, a 500-pip stop on gold with a 2,000-pip target is the same 4R as a 25-pip stop with a 100-pip target on EUR/USD. The absolute numbers are bigger — the risk management math is the same.
Equal Highs and Lows on Gold — Wider Tolerance
When identifying equal highs and equal lows on gold, the tolerance for what counts as "equal" is wider than on forex. On EUR/USD, two highs within 5–10 pips of each other form a valid equal high cluster. On gold, the tolerance is 50–150 pips — highs within that range of each other are considered equal and form a BSL cluster.
The reason is the same as the Judas extension: gold's price is approximately 1,600–2,500 times the price of EUR/USD. A 100-pip spread on gold represents the same relative distance as a 6-pip spread on EUR/USD. Think in percentage terms, not absolute pips. Two gold highs within 0.04% of each other form a valid equal high cluster — the same percentage threshold as two EUR/USD highs within 5 pips of 1.2000.
For the previous day high and low, the same rule applies. Gold's PDH is a strong level, but the Judas Swing above it will typically overshoot by 100–300 pips before reversing. Mark the PDH and add 200 pips above it as the stop level rather than putting the stop at the PDH itself.
News Events and Gold ICT Setups
Gold responds to US economic data more dramatically and more consistently than most forex pairs. The key releases that materially affect gold ICT setups are: CPI (Consumer Price Index), NFP (Non-Farm Payrolls), FOMC rate decisions and minutes, PPI (Producer Price Index), and USD GDP data.
The mechanics of a news candle on gold: when CPI prints above expectations, the dollar typically strengthens and gold sells off — often 400–800 pips in a single 1-minute candle. When CPI prints below expectations, gold rallies similarly. These moves create enormous FVGs that price returns to within hours.
The ICT approach to news events on gold:
Do not enter new positions in the 15 minutes before high-impact releases. The news candle will likely move through any FVG or OB entry before settling. Wait for the news candle to complete — its body and wick become reference points for the post-news AMD setup.
After the news candle, look for the post-news AMD sequence. The news candle often creates the Manipulation phase of a new micro-AMD cycle. A sharp spike above or below a key level on the news release, followed by an immediate reversal (MSS), followed by a retrace into the FVG created by the news candle — this is a high-probability post-news entry. Some of the largest single-session gold trades occur in the 15–45 minutes after a CPI or NFP release.
FOMC days require special handling. On Federal Reserve decision days (typically Wednesday at 2 PM ET), gold often makes multiple large swings before and after the announcement. The initial move after the announcement is frequently the Judas — it runs one direction, forces out stops, then reverses sharply to the true direction. Wait 5–10 minutes after the initial FOMC move before evaluating the setup — the Judas on FOMC day is almost always the first move.
Full Trade Walkthrough — XAU/USD London Short
Here is a complete gold ICT trade from pre-session analysis through exit, showing how the gold-specific adjustments apply in practice.
The setup below uses XAU/USD specifically. The identical ICT framework applies to NQ, ES, and forex pairs — the key adjustments for gold are the wider stop placement (beyond the full Judas wick) and the DXY SMT confirmation instead of a correlated forex pair.
Sunday analysis: Gold is trading at 2,341. Weekly dealing range: high 2,398, low 2,287. Weekly EQ: 2,342. Gold is at weekly EQ — slight premium positioning. DXY is in discount at weekly EQ. Bearish bias for the week on gold is tentative — watching for confirmation Monday.
Tuesday pre-session (1:45 AM ET): Asian range formed: High 2,363 (Asian High), Low 2,347 (Asian Low). Range: 160 pips. Gold is in premium of the daily range. PDH: 2,371. Equal highs from Monday and Tuesday at 2,363–2,365 — a BSL cluster 2 pips above the Asian High. Judas target: above 2,365, into the equal highs cluster. DXY Asian range: 104.12 (high) to 103.96 (low). DXY is at session low — any genuine gold rally would need DXY to break 103.96.
2:23 AM ET — London opens: Gold begins pushing toward the Asian High. By 2:31 AM, it reaches 2,363 — at the Asian High. Retail breakout traders begin buying.
2:38 AM ET — Judas Sweep fires: A sharp 3-candle move pushes gold to 2,378 — 15 pips above the PDH, 13 pips above the equal highs cluster, 700 pips total above the Asian High. DXY simultaneously drops to 104.01 — approaching its Asian Low at 103.96 but failing to breach it. SMT divergence confirmed: gold new high, DXY did not make new low.
2:44 AM ET — MSS: A 3-minute swing low at 2,358 (formed at 2:35 AM) is broken to the downside. Bearish MSS confirmed on the 3-minute chart. A bearish FVG forms between 2,362 and 2,371 during the MSS candle.
Entry (2:52 AM ET): Price retraces up to 2,366 — entering the FVG zone. Limit short placed at 2,366 (50% CE: (2,362 + 2,371) / 2 = 2,366.50, rounded to 2,366). Filled.
Stop: Above the Judas wick high at 2,378 — buffer to 2,380. Stop distance: 1,400 pips.
T1 (IRL): Asian Low at 2,347 — 1,900 pips, 1.36R. Hit 4:11 AM during London distribution. Took 50%, moved stop to break-even at 2,366.
T2 (ERL): PDL at 2,318 — 4,800 pips, 3.4R. Hit 11:26 AM during NY Silver Bullet distribution push.
Common Mistakes Trading Gold With ICT
Placing the stop at the Asian High instead of the Judas wick. The Judas Swing on gold runs through the Asian High by design — that is the liquidity being swept. Stopping at the Asian High means being stopped out by the exact move ICT teaches you to expect. The stop must go beyond the full wick of the Judas candle, with additional buffer for gold's volatility.
Ignoring DXY as the SMT confirmation. Trading gold Judas Swings without checking DXY is trading without half the confirmation. DXY/gold divergence is the most reliable entry signal on XAU/USD. Open DXY on a second chart panel and check it every time you see a potential gold Judas Swing before committing to an entry.
Trading gold around major news without adjusting the approach. Gold's reaction to CPI and NFP is consistently large. Entering a gold position 10 minutes before a CPI release — even if the setup looks textbook — means the news candle may run through the stop, the FVG, and the target in one candle. Always check the economic calendar before entering gold positions.
Using forex position sizing on gold. Gold's pip value is different from forex pairs. The same 1-lot position on XAU/USD versus EUR/USD represents significantly different dollar risk per pip. Always calculate position size based on the percentage of account risked per trade — do not transfer a fixed lot size from forex to gold without recalculating.
Treating every London session as a high-probability gold window. Gold's London session is excellent on days with clear daily bias and a clean Asian range. On days with no clear bias (weekly EQ, conflicting timeframes), gold's London session produces choppy, difficult price action. Filter gold London setups more strictly on days where the weekly and daily bias are ambiguous.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does ICT work on gold (XAU/USD)?
What is the best kill zone for trading gold with ICT?
What is the SMT divergence pair for gold?
Why do Judas Swings extend further on gold than forex?
How do news events affect gold ICT setups?
1 — The AMD sequence applies identically to gold; adjust for larger numbers. 2 — DXY is the SMT pair: gold new high + DXY no new low = Judas confirmed. 3 — Judas Swings extend 200–600 pips beyond key levels — stop goes beyond the full wick, not the level. 4 — London open is the primary kill zone; Silver Bullet at 10–11 AM is the secondary. 5 — Avoid entries 15 minutes before CPI, NFP, and FOMC; trade the post-news FVG instead.