Why Triple Tops and Triple Bottoms Are Different From Every Other Reversal Pattern
You've seen the double top. Price hits resistance, pulls back, hits it again, then drops. Clean reversal. Textbook.
But what happens when price comes back a third time?
That's the triple top — and it's where most traders get confused. They either jump in too early or miss the move entirely.
Let's compare the two patterns side by side so you can see exactly what sets them apart.
| Feature | Double Top/Bottom | Triple Top/Bottom |
|---|---|---|
| Number of tests | 2 | 3 |
| Rarity | Common | Rare (but powerful) |
| Formation time | Days to weeks | Weeks to months |
| False signals | More frequent | Fewer (but bigger moves) |
| Volume pattern | Declines on 2nd test | Declines on 2nd & 3rd test, surges on breakout |
| Reliability | Moderate | Higher (when confirmed) |
The triple pattern is like the double pattern's older, more patient sibling. It takes longer to form, but when it breaks, it tends to move further.
What Is a Triple Top? The Anatomy of a Failed Rally
A triple top forms after a sustained uptrend. Price hits the same resistance level three times — and fails each time.
Here's how it plays out step by step:
- First peak: Price rallies to resistance. Volume is strong. Buyers are confident. Then price pulls back to a support level.
- Second peak: Price tries again. This time, volume is lighter. Sellers are starting to push back. Price pulls back to the same support.
- Third peak: One more attempt. Volume is even weaker. The market is exhausted. Price fails to break resistance again.
- Breakdown: Price finally breaks below the support level with a surge in volume. The pattern is confirmed.
Real numbers example: EUR/USD is at 1.0950 after a 3-week uptrend. It hits 1.1000 three times between January 10 and February 5, pulling back to 1.0900 each time. On February 8, it breaks below 1.0900 on strong volume. You short at 1.0895 with a stop at 1.1010. Target: 1.0800 (the height of the pattern = 100 pips, projected downward from the breakout).
Risk: $115 on 0.1 lots (115 pips). Reward: $95 on 0.1 lots (95 pips). The risk-reward isn't great here — that's why you wait for the breakdown confirmation.
What Is a Triple Bottom? The Mirror Image of Hope
A triple bottom is the exact opposite. It forms after a downtrend. Price tests the same support level three times — and holds each time.
The formation process:
- First trough: Price drops to support. Volume is high. Sellers are aggressive. Then price bounces to a resistance level.
- Second trough: Price tests support again. Volume is lower. Sellers are losing steam. Price bounces again.
- Third trough: One more test. Volume is minimal. The market has run out of sellers. Price holds support.
- Breakout: Price breaks above the resistance neckline with strong volume. The reversal is confirmed.
Real numbers example: GBP/USD is at 1.2650 after a 4-week downtrend. It hits 1.2550 three times between March 1 and March 25, bouncing to 1.2700 each time. On March 28, it breaks above 1.2700 on strong volume. You go long at 1.2710 with a stop at 1.2530. Target: 1.2850 (the height of the pattern = 150 pips, projected upward from the breakout).
Risk: $180 on 0.1 lots (180 pips). Reward: $140 (140 pips). Again, the risk-reward isn't ideal — but the pattern's reliability makes up for it.
Triple Top vs Triple Bottom: Key Differences in Market Psychology
| Aspect | Triple Top | Triple Bottom |
|---|---|---|
| Trend context | After an uptrend | After a downtrend |
| Sentiment shift | Bullish → Bearish | Bearish → Bullish |
| Key level | Resistance holds 3 times | Support holds 3 times |
| Psychology | Buyers exhausted, sellers take control | Sellers exhausted, buyers step in |
| Volume at breakout | Surges on breakdown | Surges on breakout |
| Common mistake | Shorting too early (at 2nd peak) | Buying too early (at 2nd trough) |
The psychology is simple: each test weakens the dominant trend. By the third test, the market has shifted. The breakout confirms the new direction.
How to Trade Triple Tops and Triple Bottoms — The Right Way
Here's the wrong way: You see two peaks and assume it's a double top. You short immediately. Price comes back for a third peak, hits your stop, and keeps going higher.
Sound familiar?
Here's the right way:
- Wait for the third test. Don't trade on the second test alone. Let the pattern develop.
- Draw the neckline. Connect the swing lows (for triple top) or swing highs (for triple bottom). This is your breakout level.
- Wait for a confirmed breakout. A candle close beyond the neckline with above-average volume. Not a wick. A close.
- Enter on the retest (if it comes). Price often returns to test the neckline as new support/resistance. That's your low-risk entry.
- Set your stop. Above the third peak (for triple top) or below the third trough (for triple bottom). Give it 5-10 pips of breathing room.
- Set your target. Measure the height of the pattern and project it from the breakout level.
Scenario breakdown: You spot a triple top on USD/JPY daily chart. Resistance at 152.00, support at 150.00. Pattern height = 200 pips. Price breaks below 150.00. You short at 149.90. Stop at 152.10 (220 pips risk). Target at 147.90 (200 pips reward). Risk-reward = 1:0.9 — not great, but the pattern's win rate makes it worth it.
On 0.1 lots, that's $220 risk vs $200 reward. On 0.5 lots, it's $1,100 risk vs $1,000 reward.
Common Traps That Wipe Out Beginners
Trap #1: Trading the pattern before it's confirmed. You see two peaks and assume it's a double top. Price comes back for a third peak, hits your stop, and reverses higher. Wait for three tests.
Trap #2: Ignoring volume. A triple top with declining volume on each peak is more reliable. If volume is increasing on the third peak, the breakout might fail. Volume tells you who's winning.
Trap #3: Setting stops too tight. Give the pattern room. A 10-pip stop on a 200-pip pattern is asking to get stopped out by noise. Use the pattern's structure to set your stop — above the third peak or below the third trough.
Trap #4: Forcing the pattern. Not every three-peak formation is a triple top. Sometimes it's just a range. If the peaks are uneven or the neckline isn't clear, skip it.
FAQ
How rare are triple top and triple bottom patterns?
They're less common than double tops and bottoms. You might see 2-3 per year on a daily chart. But when they form, they tend to produce larger moves.
What timeframe works best for triple tops and bottoms?
Daily or 4-hour charts. The pattern needs time to develop. Shorter timeframes (15-min, 1-hour) produce more false signals.
Can I trade a triple top without volume data?
Yes, but it's riskier. Volume confirms the breakout. Without it, you're relying on price action alone. Use RSI or MACD divergence as a substitute.
What's the difference between a triple top and a head and shoulders?
In a head and shoulders, the middle peak is higher. In a triple top, all three peaks are roughly equal. Triple tops are rarer but simpler to identify.
Quick Recap
- Triple top = 3 failed attempts at resistance → bearish reversal
- Triple bottom = 3 failed attempts at support → bullish reversal
- Wait for the third test and a confirmed breakout with volume
- Use the pattern height to project your target
- Set stops above the third peak (top) or below the third trough (bottom)
- Don't trade on the second test — let the pattern develop
Quick Win
Open your chart right now. Pull up EUR/USD on the daily timeframe. Scroll back through the last 6 months. Find one area where price tested a level three times. Draw the neckline. Measure the pattern height. That's your next potential trade setup — if it breaks.







