Every day of the trading week has a characteristic structure in the ICT framework. Monday and Tuesday accumulate. Wednesday delivers the Judas. Thursday distributes. Friday is different from all of them — not because the AMD mechanism changes, but because the institutional objective on Friday is different from every other day.

Monday through Thursday, institutions are building and delivering positions. On Friday, they are closing them. That shift in objective — from delivery to settlement — produces a specific structural pattern that ICT calls Seek and Destroy: the algorithm seeking the week's accumulated stop clusters and sweeping them before the weekly close. Understanding this pattern is the difference between treating Friday's morning move as a tradeable trend and recognising it as the week's final manipulation before institutional desks go flat.

Why Friday Is Structurally Different

Friday's unique structure comes from three institutional forces that combine on no other day of the week:

End-of-week position squaring: Most institutional trading desks operate on weekly profit and loss cycles. By Friday, positions opened Monday through Thursday need to be closed or reduced before the week's books are settled. This means that rather than opening new positions with multi-day delivery timelines, Friday sees existing positions closed. The order flow is the reverse of a typical trading day: selling from long positions (creating downward pressure), buying from short positions (creating upward pressure), and stop-hunting the range extremes to exit at the best available prices.

Maximum accumulated stop density: After four trading days, the week's price action has created stop clusters at every significant intraday level — Tuesday's equal lows, Wednesday's Judas Swing high, Thursday's equal highs from the Silver Bullet, and the week's overall range extremes. Friday has more concentrated stop pools within striking distance than any other day of the week. This density makes Friday's sweeps particularly sharp and convincing — the stop pools are larger, so the liquidity collection is larger, and the moves appear more decisive.

Declining volume: Friday afternoon volume drops significantly as participants reduce exposure ahead of weekend news risk — geopolitical events, central bank communications, or economic data released over the weekend. Lower Friday PM volume makes stop sweeps easier to execute (smaller orders move price further) and makes sustained directional delivery harder to maintain (insufficient volume to drive multi-day continuation). This is why Friday setups are T1-only: the volume to drive a multi-session runner simply is not present.

The Two Friday Scenarios

SCENARIO A — Most Common
Friday Seek and Destroy
The week's primary move (Mon-Thu) has already delivered to T2 or close to it
Friday seeks the stop clusters left by mid-week trading — equal lows or highs from Tue/Wed range
The Friday morning move appears to REVERSE the week — trapping late trend followers
Trade: London open in the SAME direction as the weekly trend, T1 only (mid-week range extreme)
The apparent "reversal" is the seek-and-destroy sweep, not a genuine new weekly trend
SCENARIO B — Less Common
Friday Late Delivery
The week's primary move did NOT deliver Mon-Thu — the weekly AMD is incomplete
Friday produces the delayed weekly Judas Swing + distribution in a single compressed day
Larger Friday moves, sometimes 300-500+ NQ points, completing the weekly AMD
Trade: standard AMD entry (Judas + FVG) in the weekly bias direction, T1 only
Still T1 only — no overnight runners even if the move looks like it has further to go

Determining which scenario is active comes from Sunday-to-Thursday analysis. By Friday morning, you know: has the weekly AMD delivered this week? If Thursday's session hit or came close to the weekly T2 target, Scenario A is likely. If the week had low-range Mon-Thu action and the weekly T2 target is still far from current price, Scenario B is possible.

The critical difference in trade management: Scenario A produces a counter-weekly-trend Friday morning sweep that you can potentially fade (short when the S&D sweep reverses). Scenario B produces a Friday that trades more like a standard AMD Wednesday — you trade in the weekly bias direction. Getting these confused produces the biggest Friday trading errors.

Friday Seek and Destroy — Two Scenarios on NQ (Bearish Week) Left: Scenario A — week delivered, Friday sweeps mid-week highs (stop clusters) · Right: Scenario B — delayed delivery, Friday completes AMD
Scenario A — Friday Seek & Destroy Scenario B — Friday Late Delivery Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri S&D Judas EQH — S&D target (BSL) Weekly T2 hit Thu S&D sweep EQH swept Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri delivery Slow week — no delivery Fri Judas Full AMD Friday delivery Weekly T2 (reached Friday)
Two Friday scenarios on a bearish week. Left (Scenario A): Mon-Thu delivered the primary bearish move, hitting the weekly T2. Friday's Seek and Destroy sweeps the mid-week equal highs (BSL from the Wednesday Judas range) before reversing and closing the week lower. The S&D sweep looks like a reversal — it is the weekly cleanup. Right (Scenario B): Mon-Thu produced a slow, tight range with no real delivery. Friday produces the compressed weekly AMD — Judas sweep above, bearish displacement, distribution to the weekly T2. Scenario B is less common but produces larger Friday single-day moves.

Friday Trading Rules — The Full Checklist

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No new overnight positions from Friday entries
The most important Friday rule. Any position entered on Friday must be closed before the NY session close (4:00 PM ET). No runners held into the weekend. The weekend gap risk, combined with the low-probability Friday PM session, makes overnight Friday positions a negative-expectancy proposition. If a trade is still running at 3:30 PM ET on Friday, close it regardless of the apparent potential.
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T1 only — no T2 targeting on Friday entries
Friday targets are IRL levels — the nearest same-day internal range level. Not ERL. Not multi-session runner targets. The volume to drive a T2 delivery is typically absent on Friday, and even when it appears present in the morning, it rarely sustains through the afternoon. Set T1 and close the full position. On exceptionally clean Scenario B Fridays with strong weekly AMD context, closing 75% at T1 and trailing a small runner to the weekly T2 is acceptable — but this is the exception, not the rule.
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Stop all trading at 10:00 AM ET (or at T1 hit)
The London Silver Bullet (3-4 AM ET) and the NY kill zone open (9:30-10:00 AM ET) are the only viable Friday windows. After 10 AM ET on Friday, institutional volume has typically completed its position squaring and the market enters a low-probability drift. The Friday dead zone starts earlier than Mon-Thu — treat 10 AM as the hard stop time rather than 11 AM. If your T1 is hit before 10 AM, stop trading. If it is not hit by 10 AM, close at market and move on.
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Do not mistake the S&D sweep for a new trend
The Scenario A Friday Seek and Destroy sweep looks exactly like a Judas Swing leading to a new weekly trend. On a bearish week where NQ has been falling since Wednesday, a Friday morning rally above Thursday's high looks bullish. It is the S&D sweep — not a genuine directional signal. The test: has the weekly AMD already delivered to near its T2? If yes, the Friday counter-trend move is Seek and Destroy, not a new trend. Entering in the S&D sweep direction (going long on the Friday morning rally in a bearish week) is entering the trap.
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Reduce size on all Friday trades
Even when a Friday setup meets full structural criteria, position size should be 50-75% of the standard week-day position. Friday's lower institutional volume means lower setup reliability, higher false-break frequency, and less predictable follow-through. The risk management improvement from reducing Friday size — across a year of trading — is material. Many ICT traders with strong Mon-Thu performance have negative Friday P&L when trading full size; halving Friday size often turns a net negative into a neutral or slight positive.

Identifying S&D Sweep vs Genuine Reversal

The hardest part of Friday trading is distinguishing a Seek and Destroy sweep from a genuine trend reversal. Both look identical in the moment — a sharp counter-trend move that breaks prior highs or lows. Three filters separate them:

Filter 1 — Weekly AMD completion check: Has the week's primary target been reached? If the weekly AMD delivered to near the T2 level by Thursday, Friday is almost certainly Scenario A (S&D). If the week's T2 is still 200+ points away, Friday may be Scenario B or a genuine continuation. This check is done Thursday evening, not Friday morning — by the time the move is happening, it is too late to apply this filter.

Filter 2 — Body close test on the sweep candle: The S&D sweep often produces a wick-dominant candle at the level being swept — the body closes back inside the range, just like an inducement candle. A genuine reversal candle closes its body beyond the prior level. Scenario A S&D: wick above the Thursday high, body closes below it. Genuine reversal: body closes above the Thursday high. The body close test that applies to breaker blocks and mitigation blocks applies equally to the Friday S&D identification.

Filter 3 — Volume profile: A genuine trend reversal is accompanied by above-average volume confirming the new direction. A S&D sweep typically occurs on lower Friday volume — the sweep is fast and the reversal is equally fast. If the Friday morning move is accompanied by volume that is conspicuously lower than Thursday's session, the "reversal" is likely a S&D sweep. Note this is a supporting filter, not a primary one — volume alone is insufficient for Friday identification.

When all three filters agree (weekly AMD delivered + body close inside + lower volume), Scenario A S&D is confirmed and the counter-trend entry in the weekly trend direction is the trade. When the filters are mixed — weekly AMD incomplete but the candle has a large body — consider Scenario B and wait for a cleaner setup rather than forcing an entry based on a single filter.

The Best Friday Setup — London S&D Entry

Given the constraints above, the highest-probability Friday trade is the London open Seek and Destroy entry in the weekly trend direction. The setup:

For a bearish Scenario A Friday on NQ:

1. The week was bearish (delivered Mon-Thu). Weekly T2 near or reached.
2. Pre-session: the Asian range high (ARH) is the S&D target — the BSL above Thursday's range. Mark it.
3. At 2:00 AM ET London open: watch for a push above the ARH (the S&D sweep upward).
4. Body close back inside range = S&D sweep confirmed. MSS fires. FVG forms.
5. Short entry at FVG 50% CE during the 2:33 AM macro.
6. T1: Thursday's low or mid-week equal lows — same day IRL. Close 100% at T1.
7. Hard stop: 10:00 AM ET regardless.

This setup has triple temporal confirmation: it is a Friday (end-of-week S&D context), a London open (kill zone), and a 2:33 AM macro (secondary temporal anchor). The direction is with the weekly trend. The target is a same-day IRL. It is the most structurally clean Friday trade available.

Friday S&D — London Open Entry on Bearish Scenario A Week (NQ) Asian range high = S&D target · London sweep above ARH · body close inside · MSS · FVG entry · T1 same day · close by 10 AM
Asian 8PM-12AM London KZ 2-5AM NY open 9:30-10AM STOP ARH — S&D BSL target Stop above wick T1 — same-day IRL · CLOSE 100% S&D sweep ARH Short 2:33AM FVG 50% CE T1 hit 10AM CLOSE ALL
Friday Seek and Destroy — London entry on a bearish Scenario A week: Asian range builds with the ARH as the BSL target. At 2 AM London open, the S&D sweep takes the ARH above (the institutional cleanup buying retail longs). Body closes back inside — S&D sweep confirmed. MSS fires, bearish FVG forms, short entry fills at 2:33 AM macro. T1 at the same-day IRL below — 100% close at T1. Hard stop at 10 AM ET regardless of position status. No overnight runner. The setup runs like a standard London open AMD — the only difference is the Friday constraints (T1 only, out by 10 AM).

Friday S&D in the Monthly and Quarterly Calendar

The Friday Seek and Destroy does not operate in isolation. Its probability and character shift depending on where the current Friday sits in the monthly and quarterly cycle:

Week 1 Friday (early month): The monthly AMD is typically in Accumulation or early Manipulation. Week 1 Fridays are often lower-range with less dramatic S&D sweeps because the month's primary stop clusters have not yet fully built. Smaller expected range for the S&D move. Lower size recommendation.

Week 2 Friday (mid-month): The monthly Judas may have fired during Week 2. If Week 2 produced the monthly Judas Swing, Week 2's Friday is often the beginning of the Distribution phase — more of a Scenario B type Friday (the monthly delivery starting). Expect larger moves and treat with the same caution as a Scenario B week.

Week 3 Friday (post-monthly-Judas): Typically the highest-probability Friday S&D of the month. The monthly distribution is well underway, stop clusters from two weeks of trading are dense, and institutional desks are executing end-of-week settlement with momentum. Scenario A Fridays in Week 3 of a clearly trending month often produce the sharpest and most predictable S&D sweeps.

Week 4 Friday (month end): Month-end position squaring adds to the normal Friday institutional mechanics. The last Friday of the month sees the largest institutional closing of monthly positions — amplifying the S&D stop-hunting activity. Month-end Fridays can produce larger-than-average sweeps but also higher unpredictability. Size at 50% regardless of scenario confidence.

Full Walkthrough — NQ Friday Seek and Destroy (Scenario A)

Context (Friday morning): Bearish week. Wednesday Judas above 21,488, distribution delivered NQ to 21,044 by Thursday 11 AM (weekly T2 equal lows hit). Weekly AMD complete. Scenario A Friday expected. Asian Range: High 21,118, Low 21,062. Width: 56 pts — normal. Pre-market equal lows: 21,048 (Wednesday's range low — SSL). Pre-market equal highs: 21,162 (Thursday's session high — BSL = S&D target).

2:00 AM London open: NQ rallies to 21,176 — 14 pts above the S&D target (21,162). BSL swept. Body closes at 21,098 — well below 21,162. S&D sweep confirmed. Retail longs who bought the "bullish Friday reversal" are now trapped above 21,162.

2:18 AM MSS: Swing low at 21,082 (2:12 AM) broken. Bearish MSS. Displacement candle: 21,106→20,988 (118 pts, 91% body ratio). FVG: 20,982–21,106. 50% CE: 21,044. Short limit placed at 21,044.

2:33 AM entry: Retrace to 21,048. Short fills at 21,044. Stop above S&D wick: 21,176 + 8 = 21,184. Distance: 140 pts. Hard exit time: 10:00 AM ET regardless.

T1: Wednesday range low / week's SSL: 21,048 — wait, that's entry. T1 at prior day's low (Thursday): 20,924 — 120 pts, 0.86R. Hit 9:44 AM. Close 100% — Friday rule. Done for the day.

Friday Seek and Destroy Short — NQ 2:33 AM ET
Friday context
Scenario A — bearish week delivered to T2 Thu · weekly AMD complete · S&D expected
S&D target
Thursday session high 21,162 (BSL) · Asian Range: 21,062–21,118
S&D sweep
2:00 AM · spike 21,176 (+14 pts above 21,162) · body closes 21,098 · retail longs trapped
Entry
Short 21,044 (FVG 50% CE) · 2:33 AM macro · Stop 21,184 (140 pts)
T1 — 100% close
20,924 (Thursday PDL) · 120 pts · 0.86R · 9:44 AM · FULL CLOSE · done for Friday

Common Friday Mistakes

Treating the Friday morning S&D sweep as a new weekly trend. On a bearish week, the Friday morning rally looks like the week's trend reversing. This is the most expensive Friday mistake — entering long on the apparent bullish reversal, getting caught as the S&D sweep reverses back to the weekly direction, and losing the week's gains on a Friday trade taken in entirely the wrong direction. The fix: before entering any Friday trade, confirm whether the weekly AMD has already delivered. If it has, the Friday counter-trend move is S&D, not a trend reversal.

Holding overnight runners from Friday entries. The Friday hard rule: all positions entered on Friday must be closed by 4 PM ET. Weekend gaps can be 200-500+ NQ points when a geopolitical event, economic data surprise, or Fed communication occurs over the weekend. A runner held from a Friday entry at 21,044 faces this gap risk with no ability to manage it. The R:R of weekend gap risk versus the potential additional gain from a runner rarely justifies holding. Close everything by market close on Friday.

Trading the NY PM session on Friday. Friday afternoon (12 PM–4 PM ET) has the lowest probability of any regular trading window in the framework. Lower volume, position squaring complete, and pre-weekend positioning produce choppy, directionless price action. Many traders who have a profitable Friday morning trade give it back in the Friday afternoon session. The fix: once T1 is hit, walk away. Friday is a one-target day.

Expecting Scenario B when Scenario A is active. A trader who expects the week's primary delivery to come on Friday (Scenario B) when the week actually already delivered (Scenario A) will be looking for a continuation trade when the market is doing a cleanup sweep. The Scenario identification — done on Thursday evening by assessing whether the weekly AMD has delivered — is the most important Friday preparation step. Traders who skip Thursday evening prep and arrive at Friday's chart without this context are trading blind. The Friday pattern is entirely predictable in direction (weekly bias), and the scenario is entirely identifiable in advance (weekly AMD completion status) — but only if the preparation is done the evening before. Friday is not a reactive trading day; it is a planned one. The setup is determined on Thursday; Friday is the execution.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is ICT Friday Seek and Destroy?
Friday Seek and Destroy is the pattern where Friday sweeps the week's accumulated stop clusters before closing. When the weekly AMD has delivered Mon-Thu (Scenario A), Friday seeks the mid-week stop pools — equal highs or lows from Wednesday/Thursday — and destroys them with a sweep that often looks like a new trend reversal. ICT's rule: T1 only on Fridays, no overnight runners, stop trading by 10 AM ET.
Why is Friday different from Mon-Thu in ICT?
Three reasons: end-of-week position squaring (institutions closing, not opening positions), maximum accumulated stop density from four days of Mon-Thu trading, and declining Friday PM volume that makes sustained delivery unreliable. The combination means Friday's order flow is cleanup-oriented rather than delivery-oriented — more stop hunting, less directional conviction.
What are the two Friday scenarios?
Scenario A (most common): the weekly AMD has already delivered Mon-Thu. Friday sweeps the week's stop clusters, creating a false reversal appearance before closing the week in the primary trend direction. Scenario B (less common): the week's AMD did not deliver Mon-Thu. Friday produces a compressed AMD sequence — Judas Swing plus full distribution — completing the weekly delivery in a single day with sharper-than-average moves.
What is the best ICT setup to trade on Friday?
The London open S&D entry: at 2 AM ET, the Asian Range High (bearish week) or Low (bullish week) is the S&D target. The London Judas sweeps it, creating the body-close-inside confirmation. MSS fires, FVG forms, entry at 50% CE during the 2:33 AM macro. T1 = same-day IRL. Close 100% at T1. Hard stop at 10 AM ET regardless. This combines the London kill zone structure with the Friday S&D context for triple temporal confirmation.
Can you hold a runner from a Friday entry into the following week?
No — ICT's rule is clear. All positions entered on Friday must be closed before the NY session close (4 PM ET). Weekend gap risk on NQ and major forex pairs can be 200-500+ points when news events occur over the weekend. The asymmetry of weekend gap risk versus potential additional gain makes holding overnight runners from Friday entries a negative-expectancy practice regardless of how strong the setup appeared.
Friday Seek and Destroy in four rules

1 — Identify the scenario Thursday evening: has the weekly AMD delivered? Scenario A (delivered) = S&D sweep expected. Scenario B (not delivered) = late AMD expected. 2 — Do not trade the S&D sweep direction. The Friday counter-trend morning move is the trap, not the opportunity. 3 — Best entry: London open in the weekly trend direction after the S&D sweep confirms. T1 only. No runners. 4 — Hard rules: position size 50–75%, stop by 10 AM ET, close everything by 4 PM ET. Friday is a one-target day.

← Weekly context
ICT Weekly Profile — the week's AMD Friday closes