The ICT Hidden Order Block was introduced in Huddleston's 2025 mentorship as a refinement that addresses one of the most frustrating experiences in ICT trading: a structurally correct order block entry that gets stopped out before the anticipated reversal. The standard 1H OB zone is valid. The daily bias is confirmed. The kill zone is active. And price goes just a few points below the OB low — taking the stop — before reversing cleanly.
The Hidden OB explains why. The algorithm was not targeting the standard 1H OB zone as its reversal point. It was targeting a lower-timeframe OB structure that exists inside or just below the standard OB — invisible on the 1H chart, visible only when you switch to the 5M or 15M. Price needed to reach that hidden level to fill its orders before reversing. Traders who placed stops at the standard 1H OB level were stopped out by the sweep to the hidden level below. Traders who identified the Hidden OB placed their stops below it instead.
What the Hidden Order Block Is
A Hidden Order Block is an order block that exists on a lower timeframe, inside the body of a higher-timeframe candle — hidden from view unless you drill down into the chart's internal structure. It is not a new type of PD array; it is a standard OB that is rendered invisible by the compression of higher-timeframe charting.
When a 1-hour candle forms, its open, close, high, and low summarise 60 minutes of price action into a single bar. Inside that bar, on the 5-minute chart, there may be 12 separate candles. Some of those 12 candles form order block structures — last-candle-before-significant-move sequences that the algorithm references. These internal OBs are the Hidden Order Blocks.
Why does the algorithm reference them? Because institutional order execution happens at the 1M and 5M timeframe level, not the 1H level. The 1H OB marks the general zone where institutional interest exists. The Hidden OB on the 5M marks the specific sub-level within that zone where the institution's remaining unfilled orders are concentrated. When price retraces into the 1H OB zone, it will often reach the Hidden OB level before reversing — because that is where the actual fill is.
The Three Forms of Hidden Order Block
Why Standard OBs Sometimes "Fail" — The Hidden OB Explanation
The most practical value of the Hidden OB concept is that it reframes "OB failures" as targeted sweeps of the hidden level below. When a standard 1H OB entry gets stopped out before reversing, one of two things happened:
Scenario 1 — True OB failure (breaker block): The OB genuinely failed. A candle body closed through the OB's far boundary with conviction. The zone is now a breaker block. The stop-out was correct — the trade direction was wrong.
Scenario 2 — Hidden OB sweep (false failure): Price went slightly past the standard OB low but did not close a full candle body through with conviction. It found support at a lower level and reversed. This is the Hidden OB sweep — price targeted the 5M Hidden OB below the 1H OB, collected stops placed at the standard OB level, then reversed. The underlying setup was correct; the stop placement was wrong.
The probability of Scenario 2 (Hidden OB sweep vs true failure) is significantly higher when:
The retracement to the standard OB occurred during a kill zone (London or NY open), the overall higher-timeframe bias remains intact, the displacement that created the FVG had a strong body ratio (above 75%), and the breach of the standard OB low is by less than 10-15 NQ points (a small violation, not a decisive move through). When all four conditions hold, the probability that the "failure" is actually a Hidden OB sweep — not a true direction change — is elevated above 70% in backtesting on A-tier setups. This is the statistical basis for checking the 5M chart rather than immediately accepting the stop-out and moving on.
Distinguishing these two scenarios in real time requires checking the lower timeframe during the retracement. If price is moving through the 1H OB zone and on the 5M you can see it approaching a specific mini-OB structure — the last bullish 5M candle before a 5M bearish sequence — it is likely a Hidden OB sweep, not a true failure. Watch for the 5M or 1M IOFED trigger at the Hidden OB level. If it fires, the position is valid from the new level with the tighter stop.
How to Find the Hidden Order Block
When to Use the Hidden OB vs the Standard Entry
The Hidden OB is not always the right choice. Three factors determine when the precision of the Hidden OB is worth the added identification effort versus simply entering at the standard FVG 50% CE:
Use the Hidden OB when: The higher-timeframe setup is A-tier (Tier 1 POI — OB+FVG overlap, strong displacement, correct zone, confirmed bias), but the standard OB/FVG stop distance produces an R:R below 3R at T1. The Hidden OB's tighter stop restores R:R to acceptable levels. Also use it when the market has recently stopped out standard OB entries at the same zone — a pattern of standard entries getting swept before reversing is the clearest signal that the Hidden OB is the operative level.
Use the standard entry when: The displacement candle that created the FVG is a single-candle spike with no meaningful 5M internal structure (the C2 candle lasted only 1-2 minutes, leaving no internal OB to identify). Also use standard entry when the retrace moves quickly through the FVG zone — fast retraces often do not reach the Hidden OB before reversing, and waiting for the Hidden OB level means missing the entry entirely.
Combine both with a scaled entry: Many experienced ICT traders enter 50% of their position at the standard FVG 50% CE and hold the remaining 50% as a limit at the Hidden OB level. If price reverses at the standard CE, 50% fills and the Hidden OB limit is cancelled. If price continues to the Hidden OB, the second 50% fills at a better price with a tighter stop. This approach captures both the standard reversal (50% size) and the Hidden OB refinement (additional 50% at better R:R).
Hidden OB Entry vs Standard OB Entry — The R:R Comparison
The primary advantage of the Hidden OB entry over the standard OB entry is the stop distance. Because the Hidden OB zone is narrower (a single 5M candle body versus the full 1H OB body), the stop is closer to the entry. The targets (T1 IRL, T2 ERL) are identical — they are determined by the higher-timeframe structure, not by the entry precision. The result is a higher R:R from the same trade.
An example comparison on NQ. Standard 1H OB entry: OB zone 21,280–21,344. Entry at 21,312 (50% CE). Stop below OB low: 21,268. Distance: 44 points. T1: 21,488 = 176 points, 4.0R.
Hidden OB entry at the 5M internal structure: Hidden OB zone 21,292–21,308. Entry at 21,300. Stop below Hidden OB low: 21,284. Distance: 16 points. Same T1: 21,488 = 188 points, 11.75R.
Same trade. Same targets. Nearly 3× the R:R from the tighter stop. This is why the Hidden OB is not merely a conceptual refinement — it materially changes the risk profile of the same setup. The caveat: a tighter stop means a higher probability of being stopped out on normal price noise. The Hidden OB is only valid when the 5M structure is clearly identifiable and the IOFED trigger confirms the Hidden OB zone is holding.
Full Walkthrough — NQ Hidden OB Entry
Setup: Daily bias bullish. NQ in weekly discount, draw on liquidity at BSL 21,680 (weekly equal highs). 10:02 AM: a bearish 1H candle fires from 21,580 to 21,440 — large body, 88% ratio. Creates a 1H FVG: C1 close 21,568, C3 open 21,424. FVG: 21,424–21,568 (144 pts). Standard 1H OB at 21,480–21,544. 50% CE: 21,496.
Drilling to 5M inside the 10:02 AM 1H candle: On the 5M, inside the 10:02 AM 1H candle's body, there is a sequence of five bearish 5M candles from 21,568 down. At 10:26 AM, a single bullish 5M candle prints: open 21,498, close 21,512. This is the final bullish candle before four more bearish 5M candles continue the move to 21,440. This bullish 5M candle (21,498–21,512) is the Hidden OB.
Hidden OB zone: 21,498–21,512 (14 pts wide). 50% midpoint: 21,505. Stop below Hidden OB low: 21,492. Distance: 13 points.
Standard OB entry comparison: Standard entry at 1H OB 50% CE: 21,512. Stop below 1H OB low 21,480: distance 32 points. T1 at 21,680 = 168 pts, 5.25R. Hidden OB entry at 21,505. Stop at 21,492: distance 13 points. Same T1 at 21,680 = 175 pts, 13.5R.
Tuesday 2:14 AM London retrace: Price retraces to 21,502. Enters Hidden OB zone. 1M IOFED: 1M swing low at 21,497 forms, next 1M candle closes at 21,508 — above the 1M swing high. Long fills at market 21,505. Stop 21,492. Both standard and hidden entries would have been valid — but the hidden entry is 2.6× the R:R.
T1: BSL 21,680 — 175 pts, 13.5R. Hit Tuesday 10:44 AM. Close 50%, stop to BE. T2 runner: 21,880 (prior week high) — 375 pts from entry. Hit Thursday.
Common Hidden OB Mistakes
Marking every 5M candle as a Hidden OB. The Hidden OB must be the last candle of a counter-direction sequence inside the higher-timeframe displacement candle — not just any 5M candle with a visible body. A 5M candle that is mid-sequence (multiple bearish candles surrounding it with no directional shift) is not a Hidden OB. The OB must be the last counter-direction candle before the primary direction resumes.
Using the Hidden OB without IOFED confirmation. Because the Hidden OB zone is very narrow (often 10-20 NQ points), a passive limit entry without lower-timeframe confirmation risks filling inside a zone that price continues through. The 1M IOFED trigger — a 1M swing point forming inside the Hidden OB zone followed by a 1M candle closing in the trade direction — provides real-time confirmation that the Hidden OB is holding before committing.
Ignoring the higher-timeframe context. The Hidden OB is a precision entry tool, not an independent setup. It requires the full higher-timeframe stack: valid 1H FVG in the correct dealing range zone, confirmed daily and weekly bias, kill zone timing. A Hidden OB found inside a weak or misidentified 1H displacement candle inherits the weakness of the parent structure. The precision of the Hidden OB only adds value when the higher-timeframe setup is genuinely A-tier.
Treating standard OB and Hidden OB as interchangeable. The Hidden OB provides a tighter stop, but it is located inside the standard OB zone — it is a sub-level, not a replacement. On some retraces, price touches the standard OB 50% CE and reverses before reaching the Hidden OB. A trader who only uses Hidden OB entries will miss these standard OB reversals. The workflow: first identify the standard OB and its 50% CE as the primary entry level. Then drill to 5M to find the Hidden OB as a secondary, tighter entry level. If price reverses at the standard 50% CE, take it. If it continues into the Hidden OB zone, take the tighter entry there.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the ICT Hidden Order Block?
What are the three forms of Hidden Order Block?
Why do standard OB entries sometimes get stopped out before reversing?
How do you find the Hidden Order Block?
Is the Hidden OB the same as the Propulsion Block?
1 — The Hidden OB is the last counter-direction 5M candle inside a higher-timeframe displacement candle's body. Find it by drilling from 1H to 5M inside the displacement. 2 — It explains why standard OBs sometimes "fail" — price was sweeping to the Hidden OB below, not breaking the structure. 3 — Entry at Hidden OB midpoint with 1M IOFED confirmation. Stop below Hidden OB low (tighter than standard OB stop). 4 — Always needs the full higher-timeframe context — the Hidden OB is a precision entry inside a valid 1H setup, not a standalone signal.