Mastering Order Blocks and Fair Value Gaps: The Smart Money Blueprint
If you’ve ever stared at a chart and wondered why price seems to bounce off invisible lines or race through empty space, you’re not alone. Two of the most powerful concepts in modern price action trading are Order Blocks and Fair Value Gaps. These aren’t just fancy terms—they’re footprints of institutional activity. In this guide, we’ll break down what they are, how to spot them, and how to use them to improve your entries.
What Are Order Blocks?
An Order Block is a candlestick or group of candles where institutional traders (banks, funds, algorithms) placed large buy or sell orders. These zones often act as strong support or resistance because the big players have a vested interest in defending their positions.
How to Identify an Order Block
- Bullish Order Block: A down candle (or series) that precedes a strong upward move. The low of that candle becomes a support zone.
- Bearish Order Block: An up candle (or series) that precedes a sharp decline. The high of that candle becomes a resistance zone.
Pro tip: Look for order blocks on higher timeframes (1H, 4H, daily) for stronger levels.
What Are Fair Value Gaps?
A Fair Value Gap (FVG) occurs when price moves too fast, leaving an imbalance between buyers and sellers. On a candlestick chart, it appears as a gap between the wicks of three consecutive candles—where the high of one candle is lower than the low of the previous candle (or vice versa).
Why FVGs Matter
Markets dislike inefficiency. Price often returns to “fill” these gaps before continuing the trend. This makes FVGs excellent targets for retracement entries.
How to Trade the Setup
Combine both concepts for a high-probability strategy:

1. Identify a trend (use moving averages or market structure).
2. Mark key order blocks in the direction of the trend.
3. Look for a Fair Value Gap that aligns with the order block.
4. Wait for price to retrace into the FVG and order block zone.
5. Enter on confirmation (e.g., a bullish engulfing candle or a wick rejection).
Example Setup (Bullish)
- Price is in an uptrend.
- You spot a bullish order block on the 4H chart.
- Price pulls back and creates a fair value gap just above that block.
- You enter a long position when price touches the FVG and shows a reversal candle.
Risk Management
- Stop-loss: Place it just below the order block (for longs) or above (for shorts). A break of the order block signals institutional exit.
- Take-profit: Target the next significant resistance (for longs) or support (for shorts), or use a 1:2 risk-to-reward ratio.
- Position size: Never risk more than 1-2% of your account on a single trade.
Remember: Not every order block or FVG will work. Wait for confluence—multiple timeframes, trend direction, and volume confirmation.
Final Thoughts
Order blocks and fair value gaps give you a peek into where the “smart money” is active. They turn chaotic price action into a structured map of institutional footprints. Start by marking them on your charts, practice on historical data, and you’ll soon see the market with new eyes.
Trade smart, stay disciplined, and let the market come to you.
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