When most traders search for "reversal patterns," they are thinking about traditional technical analysis: head and shoulders, double tops, wedges, engulfing candles. ICT uses none of these as primary reversal signals. The reason is not philosophical preference — it is structural. Traditional reversal patterns describe what price looks like after a reversal has occurred. ICT reversal signals describe why the reversal is happening and predict it before the full pattern completes.

The ICT framework identifies reversals through one universal mechanism: the algorithm sweeps a liquidity pool, collects the stop orders clustered at that level as counterparty fills, and then reverses to deliver price in the opposite direction. Every ICT reversal — from the Judas Swing to a Turtle Soup to an equal highs sweep — is a variation of this same sweep-and-reverse sequence. Understanding the mechanism is more useful than memorising the patterns, because the mechanism is the same regardless of which specific structure the sweep targets.

The Core Reversal Mechanism — Sweep and Reverse

Before examining the individual ICT reversal patterns, the core mechanism must be understood. Every ICT reversal has the same three-part structure:

Part 1 — The Liquidity Pool: A concentration of stop orders sits above a prior high or below a prior low. This is the BSL (buy-stop liquidity) above recent highs or SSL (sell-stop liquidity) below recent lows. The denser the cluster — the more obvious the level is to retail traders — the more valuable it is to the algorithm as a source of institutional order fills.

Part 2 — The Sweep: The algorithm drives price to the liquidity pool, triggering the stop orders. For a bearish reversal, price pushes above the prior high — taking all the buy stops. For a bullish reversal, price pushes below the prior low — taking all the sell stops. The sweep appears as a wick on the chart: the candle body stays near the original range, but the wick extends beyond the prior extreme. The body close back inside the range is the confirmation that the sweep was manipulation, not genuine continuation.

Part 3 — The Reversal: After the sweep, the algorithm has the liquidity it needed. Price reverses. The market structure shift (MSS) on the trading timeframe confirms the reversal is structural rather than just a momentary pullback. A fair value gap forms during the MSS displacement — this is the entry zone for the reversal trade.

This three-part sequence is the ICT reversal. Every pattern below is a specific version of it — differing in the type of liquidity pool swept, the timeframe scale, and the additional confluence signals that accompany it.

The 7 ICT Reversal Patterns — S Through C Tier

S
Triple Confluence Reversal — Sweep + SMT + MSS + FVG
The highest-probability ICT reversal. A liquidity sweep occurs at a key level, simultaneously confirmed by SMT divergence (NQ sweeps but ES does not, or vice versa), followed by an MSS on the 5M or 15M chart, with a clean 1st Presented FVG entry zone from the MSS displacement candle. All four elements — sweep, SMT, MSS, FVG — align at the same moment. This is the maximum confluence reversal available in the framework. Found approximately 1–3 times per week during kill zones. Full-size entry justified.
FULL SIZE SMT guide →
A
Judas Swing — Session Manipulation Reversal
The primary daily reversal mechanism. At the London or NY open, price extends beyond the prior session's range (sweeping the Asian high or pre-market high) before reversing and delivering the true session direction. The Judas Swing is an A-tier reversal because it occurs predictably at kill zone timing with institutional backing, but without SMT confirmation it sits below the S-tier triple confluence. Highest probability when the sweep is clean, the body closes back inside the range, and the daily bias is strongly confirmed.
HIGH PROB Full guide →
A
Turtle Soup — Equal Highs/Lows False Breakout
A sweep of a prior equal high or equal low that appears to be a breakout but reverses immediately. The equal highs or lows represent a dense stop cluster because they are visually obvious to retail traders — everyone puts stops just above or below them. When the algorithm sweeps these levels and reverses, the liquidity collected is substantial. Turtle Soup setups have the same entry mechanics as a Judas Swing (sweep + MSS + FVG) but are triggered by a specific stop cluster rather than a session-level range extreme.
HIGH PROB Full guide →
B
Breaker Block Reversal — Failed OB Flip
When price trades through an existing order block (body close through the OB), the OB fails and becomes a breaker block — what was support becomes resistance, or vice versa. The reversal occurs when price returns to the breaker block level after the structural flip. This is a B-tier reversal because it requires a prior structural event (the OB failure) and the reversal is against the direction of the original OB's institutional positioning. Reliable but requires the breaker block to be in the correct dealing range zone.
B
CRT Reversal — Candle Range Theory Phase 1 Sweep
The CRT Phase 1 expansion is a micro-reversal at the individual candle scale. The expansion candle sweeps the prior candle's high or low (Phase 1), then retraces into its own FVG (Phase 2), and the entry at the FVG 50% CE is the Phase 3 reversal entry. CRT reversals are B-tier because they work best when the larger AMD context confirms the direction — a bearish CRT on a bearish day is high probability; a bearish CRT on a bullish day is much lower. The kill zone timing filter applies: only trade CRT reversals within active kill zone hours.
B
NWOG Fill Reversal — Weekly Gap Completion
After the NWOG fills (price retraces to the 50% CE of the weekly gap), the algorithm reverses to deliver the week's primary directional move. This is a B-tier reversal because it is predictable (NWOGs fill 70–80% of the time) and structurally well-defined, but the fill itself appears to be a move against the weekly bias — requiring patience and the MSS confirmation before entry. The NWOG fill reversal is the opening act of the weekly AMD distribution phase.
C
Mitigation Block Return — Failed Move Origin
When price returns to the origin of a failed institutional move (the mitigation block), a brief reversal or pause can occur. C-tier because the institutional positioning from the failed move has already been partially absorbed — the reversal potential is lower than a fresh OB or a current-session sweep. Mitigation blocks serve best as area references and secondary confluence rather than primary entry triggers.

The Multi-Confluence Reversal Stack

The tier hierarchy reflects individual pattern probability. In practice, the highest-conviction reversal trades combine multiple signals simultaneously. Each signal added to the stack increases the probability of a genuine reversal rather than a continuation. Here is the confluence stack in order of what to look for:

1
Daily/weekly bias confirmed — direction filter
Before any reversal signal, the daily and weekly bias must confirm the reversal direction. A bearish reversal in weekly premium on a bearish day has the full weight of the higher timeframe behind it. A bearish reversal on a bullish day is countertrend and lower probability regardless of how clean the pattern looks. Bias is the gate — no bias confirmation, no trade.
2
Kill zone timing — institutional activity window
The reversal must form inside an active kill zone — London (2–5 AM ET) or NY open (8:30–11 AM ET). Reversals outside kill zones may look identical structurally but fail at substantially higher rates because the institutional order flow that sustains the delivery is absent. Kill zone filter eliminates an entire category of false reversal signals before they cost money.
3
Liquidity sweep — the trigger
A wick above a prior high (BSL sweep) or below a prior low (SSL sweep) with the body closing back inside the range. The sweep is the first confirmation that the reversal mechanism has fired. No sweep = no ICT reversal setup. A gradual drift to a level without a wick sweep is not an ICT reversal — it is price reaching a level without taking liquidity first.
4
SMT divergence — intermarket non-confirmation
The most powerful single confluence signal for NQ/ES reversals. When NQ sweeps above a prior high but ES fails to make a corresponding new high (or vice versa), the divergence confirms the sweep was institutional manipulation rather than genuine buying. SMT divergence elevates any A-tier reversal to S-tier. Not always present — but when it is, treat the setup as maximum priority.
5
Market Structure Shift — structural confirmation
After the sweep, the MSS on the 5M or 15M chart confirms that the reversal is structural, not just a temporary pullback. Name the specific swing point that was broken. "The 9:48 AM 5M swing low at 21,462 was broken, confirming bearish MSS." The MSS is the transition from manipulation to distribution — no MSS, no entry.
6
1st Presented FVG — the entry zone
The MSS displacement candle creates the 1st Presented FVG. Entry at the 50% CE of this FVG on the retrace. Stop beyond the sweep wick. T1 at nearest IRL. This is the final element — all five above must be confirmed before the FVG entry is treated as maximum confidence.

When all six confluence elements align — the S-tier triple confluence reversal from the hierarchy — you have the most reliable ICT entry available. Not every reversal produces all six. A Judas Swing during the NY open with the daily bias confirmed and a clean MSS + FVG (elements 1, 2, 3, 5, 6) is an A-tier entry and still high probability. Adding SMT divergence upgrades it to S-tier. Each missing element reduces confidence; each added element increases it.

ICT Multi-Confluence Reversal — All 6 Signals on NQ (Bearish) Kill zone · BSL sweep · SMT divergence · MSS · 1st FVG · entry at 50% CE
Kill Zone — NY open 8:30–11 AM ET Prior high — BSL pool ① Bias: bearish Stop beyond sweep wick T1 — IRL T2 — ERL ② Kill zone ✓ ③ BSL sweep ✓ — body inside ④ SMT divergence ✓ NQ new high · ES did not ⑤ MSS ↓ ⑥ 1st FVG 50% CE SHORT fills FVG 50% CE T1 hit T2 hit Confluence: 6/6 ① Bearish bias ✓ ② Kill zone ✓ ③ BSL sweep ✓ ④ SMT ✓ ⑤ MSS ✓ ⑥ 1st FVG ✓ = S-tier entry
Multi-confluence bearish reversal on NQ — all 6 signals: ① weekly/daily bearish bias confirmed, ② kill zone active (NY open), ③ BSL sweep above prior high (wick above, body closes back inside), ④ SMT divergence (NQ makes new high, ES does not), ⑤ 5M MSS fires as prior swing low breaks, ⑥ 1st Presented FVG forms from MSS displacement. Limit short at FVG 50% CE. Stop above sweep wick. T1 at IRL, T2 at ERL. When all 6 align: S-tier. Full size justified.

Reversal vs Continuation — The Real-Time Distinction

The hardest real-time decision in ICT trading is distinguishing a genuine reversal from a continuation sweep. Both produce a wick above a prior high followed by a brief pullback. The difference is what happens next — which you cannot know in advance. But there are signals that favour one outcome over the other before the MSS fires.

Signals that favour a genuine reversal: The sweep extends beyond the prior high by a meaningful amount (not a 1-tick poke), the body of the sweep candle closes decisively back inside the range, the SMT divergence is present, the daily bias aligns with the reversal direction, and the sweep occurs during an active kill zone at a macro time window. The more of these that are present, the higher the probability the sweep is manipulation rather than continuation.

Signals that favour continuation (no reversal): The sweep candle's body closes above the prior high — not just the wick, the body. Multiple consecutive candles extending above the prior high without returning inside the range. The weekly bias strongly favours the direction of the sweep (bullish week, price sweeping a high and continuing higher). No SMT divergence present. The sweep occurs outside a kill zone.

The MSS is the ultimate arbiter. A genuine reversal produces an MSS on the 5M or 15M chart — a prior swing low breaks (for bearish) or a prior swing high breaks (for bullish) as a direct consequence of the reversal displacement. If no MSS forms within 3–5 candles of the sweep, the continuation scenario is more likely. Wait for the MSS before entering. Not waiting for the MSS is the single most common cause of entering into continuation sweeps disguised as reversals.

NQ-Specific Reversal Patterns — The 9:30 AM Open

NQ produces the most reliable and repeatable reversal sequences in the ICT community because of the hard open at 9:30 AM ET. The pre-market builds the accumulation range (establishing the BSL above the pre-market high and SSL below the pre-market low), and at 9:30 AM, the Judas Swing fires — sweeping one of these levels before reversing for the day's primary delivery.

The 9:30 AM NQ reversal has a specific structure that repeats with high regularity on directional days:

The NQ 9:30 AM Reversal Sequence: 1) Pre-market high established as BSL target (bearish day). 2) 9:30 AM open: NQ spikes above pre-market high, taking BSL — this is the sweep. ES simultaneously fails to sweep its equivalent level — SMT divergence. 3) The opening candle's body closes back below the pre-market high. 4) 9:48–9:50 AM: 5M MSS fires as the first post-open swing low breaks. 5) 1st Presented FVG forms from the MSS displacement. 6) 10:00–10:10 AM: retrace into FVG during the Silver Bullet window. Entry fills. 7) Distribution runs to T1 (pre-market low) and T2 (daily ERL).

This exact sequence — modified slightly by the specific levels involved — is the most traded reversal in the current ICT community. It appears on most trending days during the NY open. Traders who have identified it in 200+ historical instances find that the SMT divergence step is the single most reliable differentiator between days where the 9:30 AM sweep reverses (the standard pattern) and days where it continues (requiring the Venom Model or Silver Bullet rules instead).

Reversal vs Continuation — The Body Close Test Left: body closes inside range → genuine reversal · Right: body closes outside range → continuation, no entry
Genuine Reversal ✓ Continuation — No Reversal ✗ Prior high — BSL T1 Wick sweeps BSL Body closes BELOW ✓ MSS ↓ Enter short · deliver to T1 Prior high — BSL Body closes ABOVE BSL = Continuation, not reversal No entry — wait for next setup
The body close rule determines reversal vs continuation. Left: sweep wick extends above the BSL level but the candle body closes back below — genuine reversal setup, MSS and FVG follow, entry valid. Right: the candle body closes above the BSL level — this is continuation, not reversal. No ICT reversal entry exists. The body close test is binary and applies to every ICT reversal pattern. One level below: reversal. One level above: continuation. There is no middle ground.

Failed Reversals — When the Sweep Continues

A failed reversal occurs when the full sweep-and-reverse setup forms — sweep, body close inside, MSS fires, FVG entry taken — but price then continues through the stop level in the direction of the original sweep. The entry is stopped out.

Failed reversals are not random. They cluster in specific conditions and their occurrence is informative:

Bias was wrong. The most common cause. A bearish reversal setup that stops out and continues higher is telling you the daily or weekly bias was wrong. The sweep that appeared to be manipulation was actually genuine buying — the algorithm was in distribution upward, not manipulation downward. When a reversal fails and price aggressively continues through the stop, reconsider the entire bias assessment for the session.

Higher timeframe delivery overrides the pattern. A bearish reversal forming at a minor swing high is structurally correct but may be overwhelmed by a larger bullish delivery in progress. The higher timeframe institutions are distributing upward; the minor sweep at the 15M level is noise rather than the primary manipulation. Always check whether the reversal is forming with or against the next higher timeframe delivery direction.

The failed reversal is itself a signal. When a bearish reversal fails (stop hit) and price continues strongly higher, the failure is a bullish signal. The market just demonstrated that buying pressure absorbed the sell stops and continued — a bullish continuation is in progress. The failed bearish reversal can flip into a bullish continuation entry on the subsequent pullback to the failed reversal level. The level that was the sweep target for shorts is now potential support for longs.

Full Walkthrough — NQ Multi-Confluence Reversal

Pre-session: Daily bias bearish — NQ in weekly premium. Pre-market high: 21,524 (BSL). Pre-market low: 21,456. Plan: expect Judas sweep above 21,524 at the 9:30 AM open or the 9:50 AM macro. Mark 21,524 as the sweep target. Confluence checklist before session: ① bearish bias ✓ ② NY kill zone ✓ — waiting for ③④⑤⑥.

9:30 AM — Sweep fires: NQ spikes to 21,568 — 44 points above pre-market high. BSL swept ③. ES simultaneously reaches 5,622 vs its pre-market high of 5,618 — only 4 points versus NQ's 44. SMT divergence ④ confirmed. Sweep candle body closes at 21,498 — 26 points below the pre-market high. Body closes inside range ✓.

9:48 AM — MSS: 5M swing low at 21,480 (formed at 9:38 AM) is broken. Bearish MSS ⑤ confirmed. 1st Presented FVG ⑥: 21,502–21,536. 50% CE: 21,519.

10:06 AM — Entry fills: Retrace to 21,521 during Silver Bullet window. Limit short at 21,519 fills.

Stop: Above sweep wick 21,568 — buffer to 21,574. Distance: 55 points.

T1 (IRL): Pre-market low 21,456 — 63 points, 1.1R. Hit 10:52 AM. Close 50%, stop to BE.

T2 (ERL): Equal lows 21,180 — 339 points, 6.2R. Hit Wednesday 10:28 AM.

Confluence score: 6/6 — S-tier entry. Full size justified.

Multi-Confluence Reversal — NQ Tuesday 10:06 AM ET
Confluence
① Bearish bias ✓ ② Kill zone ✓ ③ BSL sweep ✓ ④ SMT ✓ ⑤ MSS ✓ ⑥ 1st FVG ✓ — 6/6 S-tier
Sweep
9:30 AM spike to 21,568 (+44 pts) · ES +4 pts only · SMT confirmed · body closes 21,498
MSS + FVG
9:48 AM swing low 21,480 broken · FVG 21,502–21,536 · 50% CE 21,519
Entry
Short 21,519 · fills 10:06 AM · Silver Bullet ✓ · Stop 21,574 (55 pts)
T1
21,456 (PM low) · 63 pts · 1.1R · 10:52 AM · stop to BE
T2
21,180 (equal lows) · 339 pts · 6.2R · Wednesday 10:28 AM

Common ICT Reversal Mistakes

Entering before the MSS confirms. The sweep fires — the wick extends above the prior high. The trader enters short immediately at the wick extreme, before the MSS has occurred. This is entering during the manipulation phase, not the distribution phase. The MSS is the signal that manipulation is complete. Without it, price may continue sweeping higher for several more candles before reversing. The sweep is not the entry — it is the precondition. The MSS is the entry signal.

Treating every sweep as a reversal. Not every sweep produces a reversal. Continuation sweeps look identical to reversal sweeps before the body close and MSS are evaluated. A sweep at 9:30 AM on a bullish day may be the algorithm briefly taking buy stops below a prior low before continuing higher — the same visual structure as a reversal sweep, but in the opposite context. The bias filter (element 1 of the confluence stack) must be confirmed before treating any sweep as a reversal signal.

Using traditional TA reversal patterns as confirmation. Seeing a hammer candle, a doji, or a bullish engulfing at the sweep level and treating it as ICT reversal confirmation. These are not ICT signals. The ICT reversal confirmation is structural: body close back inside the range + MSS on the trading timeframe + FVG entry zone. A hammer that forms at the sweep level adds minor visual confirmation but is not the primary signal — and relying on it delays the entry or creates false confirmation when the candle pattern appears without the structural criteria.

Not adjusting the reversal tier to the context. Trading every reversal at full size because "a sweep occurred and the MSS fired." The tier of the reversal determines the size. A standalone CRT reversal without bias confirmation and outside a kill zone is a C-tier setup — 0.25% risk, if traded at all. The same reversal structure with all six confluence elements is S-tier — up to 2% risk. The pattern is the same; the context determines the confidence and position size.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are ICT reversal patterns?
ICT reversal patterns are liquidity-driven price structures that signal the transition from the AMD manipulation phase to the distribution phase. Unlike traditional TA reversals (head and shoulders, double tops), ICT reversals are triggered by a liquidity sweep — the algorithm takes stop orders from one side of the market and then delivers price in the opposite direction. The core mechanism is identical across all 7 ICT reversal types: sweep a stop cluster, close the body back inside the range, fire the MSS, form the 1st Presented FVG, and deliver in the reversal direction.
What is the most reliable ICT reversal pattern?
The highest-reliability reversal combines all six confluence elements: bearish/bullish bias confirmed, active kill zone, BSL/SSL sweep with body close inside, SMT divergence, MSS on the 5M chart, and a clean 1st Presented FVG entry zone. This S-tier setup — Judas Swing + SMT + MSS + FVG during a kill zone on a confirmed bias day — appears roughly 1–3 times per week and is the single highest-probability entry in the ICT framework. SMT divergence is the most valuable confluence signal to add — it elevates any A-tier reversal to S-tier.
How do you tell a reversal from a continuation?
The body close test is binary: if the sweep candle's body closes back inside the prior range, it is a potential reversal. If the body closes beyond the prior high or low, it is continuation — no reversal entry. Confirm with the MSS: a genuine reversal produces an MSS within 3–5 candles of the sweep. No MSS = continuation. SMT divergence is the pre-confirmation signal: if NQ sweeps a high that ES does not confirm, the sweep is more likely manipulation (reversal) than genuine buying (continuation).
What is a failed ICT reversal?
A failed reversal occurs when the full setup forms — sweep, body close, MSS, FVG entry — but price then continues through the stop level in the original sweep direction. The most common cause is a bias error: the daily or weekly direction was wrong, and the apparent manipulation was genuine directional delivery. A failed reversal is informative — it signals that the sweep direction may actually be the week's delivery direction. Consider whether the failed reversal is itself a continuation entry in the direction the sweep is now delivering.
Can ICT reversals happen outside kill zones?
Technically yes — reversal structures form at all hours. Practically, reversals outside kill zones fail at substantially higher rates because institutional order flow is absent. The same sweep + MSS + FVG at 2 PM ET (dead zone) versus 10:10 AM ET (Silver Bullet macro) will have materially different follow-through. For reliable reversal trading, only enter reversals that form within the London kill zone (2–5 AM ET) or the NY open (8:30–11 AM ET) — and specifically at macro time windows within those sessions.
ICT reversal in five rules

1 — Every ICT reversal is sweep-and-reverse: wick beyond the stop cluster, body closes back inside. 2 — The MSS confirms the reversal is structural — no MSS = no entry. 3 — Six confluence elements: bias, kill zone, sweep, SMT, MSS, 1st FVG. Each adds probability; 6/6 = S-tier full size. 4 — Body closes above the prior level = continuation, not reversal. Binary test. 5 — Failed reversal = bias reconsideration. The sweep direction that your stop ran through may be the true delivery direction.

← Core pattern
ICT Judas Swing — the primary reversal