Most traders see a descending triangle and immediately think bearish short it. The data says otherwise. Thomas Bulkowski studied over 1,300 descending triangles and found they break upward 53% of the time with an average gain of 38% on successful upward breakouts. That single fact changes how you should trade this pattern.
This guide covers exactly how to identify, confirm, and trade descending triangles in crypto backed by real statistics, not guesswork.
A descending triangle forms when price creates a series of lower highs converging toward a flat horizontal support line. The upper trendline slopes downward, while the lower trendline holds level creating a squeeze that builds pressure until price breaks out in one direction.
Think of it as two forces in conflict: sellers pushing the price down with decreasing force from above, while a floor of determined buyers defends a specific price level. Eventually, one side runs out of ammunition.
The pattern is fully explained with live crypto examples and backtested results in ChartScout’s complete Descending Triangle Pattern Crypto guide.
Here is what Bulkowski’s research on 1,300+ trades found in bull markets:
The risk-reward is dramatically skewed toward the upside. Upward breakouts produce more than double the average move of downward breakouts. If you only short descending triangles by default, you are systematically trading the weaker side of the pattern.
Not every declining wedge on a chart qualifies. Here are the four non-negotiable criteria:
Timing tip: The median breakout occurs 61–65% of the way from the pattern’s start to the apex. Breakouts in the first two-thirds tend to produce the strongest moves. Breakouts right at the apex are weak and unreliable.
A descending triangle on the 1-hour ETH/USDT chart a higher timeframe example that tends to produce more reliable patterns. Higher timeframes filter out noise and give the pattern more significance for swing traders.1. Breakout Entry (Most Common) Enter when price closes outside the trendline on above-average volume ideally 1.5–2x the 20-period average. This confirms direction before committing capital.
2. Throwback/Pullback Entry (Best Risk-Reward) Since 60% of breakouts retest the breakout level, you can wait for price to return to the former support (now resistance) or former resistance (now support) and enter on the bounce. You get a tighter stop and better entry price at the cost of missing the 40% of trades that don’t retest.
3. Anticipation Entry (Aggressive) Enter long at the horizontal support level while the pattern is still forming, betting on an upward breakout. Requires a tight stop just below support and high conviction in the setup.
Stop-loss placement:
Price target (Measure Rule): Measure the height from the triangle’s highest peak to the horizontal support. For upward breakouts, add that height to the breakout price. For downward breakouts, subtract it.
Example: Peak at $50,000 | Support at $45,000 | Height = $5,000 | Breakout at $48,000 → Target = $53,000
Approximately 64% of upward breakouts reach this full target. Only 50% of downward breakouts do.
Bulkowski’s data comes from traditional stock markets. Crypto adds several layers of risk:
The 4-hour and daily timeframes produce the cleanest, most reliable descending triangle signals in crypto. Anything below 15 minutes is noise.
Assuming the breakout direction in advance.
The descending triangle looks bearish. It has lower highs. The shape suggests selling pressure. But the statistics are clear: 53% of these patterns resolve to the upside. Traders who short automatically, before confirmation, are fading the more common outcome.
Wait for the confirmed candle close. Wait for the volume spike. Then trade what the market is actually telling you not what the shape suggests.
Manually scanning hundreds of pairs across multiple timeframes is impractical. ChartScout monitors 1,000+ crypto pairs across Binance, Bybit, KuCoin, and MEXC 24/7 — detecting descending triangles and alerting you in under 20 seconds the moment a valid pattern forms.
If you want to go deeper into pattern-based trading strategies, the Trading Education hub covers every major formation with the same data-backed approach used in this guide.
Educational purposes only. Cryptocurrency trading involves substantial risk. Never invest more than you can afford to lose.
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Statistical source: Thomas N. Bulkowski, Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns, 3rd Edition & ThePatternSite.com, based on 1,300+ trades in traditional markets. Crypto markets exhibit higher volatility and results may vary. Always use proper risk management.
Descending Triangle Pattern: 78% Success Rate Crypto Trading Guide (2026) was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


