What Exactly Is an Engulfing Candle Pattern?
Let's cut through the noise. An engulfing candle pattern is a two-candle formation that signals a potential market reversal. The second candle completely "engulfs" the body of the first one. That's it. Simple concept, but it tells you a lot about who's in control.
Here's the deal: when you see a bullish engulfing candle pattern, buyers just took over after sellers had control. When you spot a bearish engulfing candle pattern, sellers just crushed the buyers' party.
Think of it like a tug-of-war. The first candle shows one team winning. The second candle shows the other team not just winning — but completely dominating. The rope didn't just cross the line. It flew past it.
Before we dive deeper, let's get one thing straight: this pattern works on any timeframe and any market. Forex, stocks, crypto, gold — doesn't matter. The psychology is universal.
Bullish Engulfing Candle Pattern: The Setup
A bullish engulfing candle pattern forms after a downtrend. Here's what it looks like:
- Candle 1: A red (bearish) candle. Small or medium body. Sellers are in charge.
- Candle 2: A green (bullish) candle that opens lower than Candle 1's close and closes higher than Candle 1's open. Its body completely covers Candle 1's body.
Let's make this real. EUR/USD is at 1.0850. You see three red candles in a row. On the fourth day, price opens at 1.0845 (lower than the previous close of 1.0850). By the end of the day, it closes at 1.0875. That green candle is bigger than the previous red candle. That's your bullish engulfing candle pattern.
What It Tells You
Buyers just walked in and said "enough." They absorbed all the selling pressure and pushed price higher. The low of the second candle becomes a key level. If price stays above it, the reversal is likely real.
Here's the key: the bigger the engulfing candle, the stronger the signal. If the green candle is 3x the size of the previous red candle, that's a serious shift in momentum.
Bearish Engulfing Candle Pattern: The Flip Side
A bearish engulfing candle pattern is the exact opposite. It forms after an uptrend:
- Candle 1: A green (bullish) candle. Buyers are in control.
- Candle 2: A red (bearish) candle that opens higher than Candle 1's close and closes lower than Candle 1's open. Its body completely covers Candle 1's body.
Example: Gold (XAU/USD) is at $2,450. You see three green candles. Then, a red candle opens at $2,452 and closes at $2,435 — completely engulfing the previous green candle. That's your bearish engulfing candle pattern.
What It Tells You
Sellers just showed up in force. The high of the second candle becomes resistance. If price can't break above it, the downtrend is likely real.
⚠️ Warning: Don't trade the pattern alone. Always look for confirmation. A bearish engulfing at resistance is stronger than one in the middle of nowhere.
Bullish vs Bearish Engulfing: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Bullish Engulfing | Bearish Engulfing |
|---|---|---|
| Where it forms | After a downtrend (at support) | After an uptrend (at resistance) |
| First candle | Red (bearish) | Green (bullish) |
| Second candle | Green (bullish) — engulfs first | Red (bearish) — engulfs first |
| What it signals | Buyers are taking control | Sellers are taking control |
| Trade direction | Long (buy) | Short (sell) |
| Stop loss level | Below second candle's low | Above second candle's high |
How to Trade the Engulfing Candle Pattern (With Real Numbers)
Let's walk through a real trade using the bullish engulfing candle pattern on GBP/USD.
The Setup
- GBP/USD is at 1.2650 after a 3-day downtrend
- You see a red candle (1.2640 close)
- Next candle opens at 1.2635, closes at 1.2675 — completely engulfing the red candle
- This is your bullish engulfing candle pattern
Entry
Wait for confirmation. Don't buy at the close of the engulfing candle. Wait for the next candle to close above the engulfing candle's high (1.2675). This filters out false signals.
Entry: 1.2680 (after confirmation)
Stop Loss
Place your stop below the low of the engulfing candle. In this case, 1.2630.
Risk: 50 pips. On 0.1 lots, that's $50. On 0.5 lots, that's $250.
Target
Use the previous resistance level. Let's say 1.2750.
Reward: 70 pips. Risk:Reward = 1:1.4. Not amazing, but solid.
The Math
On 0.1 lots: Risk $50, Reward $70. On 0.5 lots: Risk $250, Reward $350.
If your win rate is 60% on this setup, you're profitable over time.
Common Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Mistake #1: Trading Every Engulfing Pattern
Not all engulfing patterns are equal. A bullish engulfing candle pattern in the middle of a range is weak. One at a key support level after a downtrend? That's strong.
Fix: Only trade engulfing patterns at clear support or resistance levels.
Mistake #2: Ignoring the Trend
A bearish engulfing candle pattern in a strong uptrend might just be a pullback. Price could reverse right back up.
Fix: Check the higher timeframe. If the daily chart is in an uptrend, a bearish engulfing on the 1-hour chart is less reliable.
Mistake #3: Not Confirming
The pattern alone isn't enough. You need confirmation — a higher close the next day, a bullish RSI divergence, or volume spike.
Fix: Use at least one additional indicator. RSI or MACD works well.
FAQ
What is the difference between a bullish and bearish engulfing candle pattern?
A bullish engulfing pattern forms after a downtrend and signals a potential upward reversal. A bearish engulfing pattern forms after an uptrend and signals a potential downward reversal. The direction of the second candle determines the type.
How reliable is the engulfing candle pattern?
It's one of the more reliable reversal patterns, especially on higher timeframes (H4 and above). However, no pattern is 100% accurate. Always use stop losses and confirm with other tools.
Can I trade engulfing patterns on lower timeframes?
Yes, but expect more false signals. On M5 or M15, market noise can create fake engulfing patterns. Stick to H1 or higher for better reliability.
What's the best stop loss placement for an engulfing pattern?
For a bullish engulfing, place your stop below the low of the second candle. For a bearish engulfing, place it above the high of the second candle. This gives price room to breathe while protecting your account.
Quick Recap
- An engulfing candle pattern is a two-candle reversal signal: bullish after downtrend, bearish after uptrend
- The second candle must completely cover the first candle's body
- Trade at key support/resistance levels for higher reliability
- Always confirm with a second indicator or price action
- Risk 1-2% per trade. Use the engulfing candle's low/high for stop placement
Your Quick Win
Open your chart right now. Pick EUR/USD on the 1-hour timeframe. Scroll back 50 candles. Find the last 3 bullish engulfing candle patterns and 3 bearish engulfing candle patterns. Mark where they formed. Were they at support or resistance? That's your homework. Do it now.







