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Free tools·Chart practice

Support and Resistance Practice

Learn to see the levels the rest of the market is already watching.

infoEducational only. This tool does not provide financial, investment, legal, or trading advice. Trading and investing involve risk. Verify information independently and make your own decisions.

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Example 1 of 10 · Score 0

Which zone is most likely acting as resistance?

What this tool does

Ten interactive examples present stylized charts and ask you to identify the most likely support or resistance zone. Each answer explains the reasoning.

How to use this tool

  1. Look at the chart and the question.
  2. Pick the zone you think the market is most likely to react at.
  3. Read the explanation, then move on to the next example.

Example

Sample question: a multi-touch ceiling at $50 with three rejections. Resistance is most likely the $50 zone — not the recent intraday high, not the random midpoint.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Drawing lines at single touches and treating them as 'levels'.
  • Confusing trend lines with horizontal support and resistance.
  • Treating every level as a hard floor or ceiling instead of a zone.
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Frequently asked questions

Is identifying support and resistance subjective?add

Somewhat — but the strongest zones share clear traits: multiple touches, recent rejections, and round-number gravity.

Should levels be lines or zones?add

Zones. Treat every line as having some thickness, especially on higher time frames.

How many examples are in this tool?add

At least 10 practice questions in the first version, with more added over time.

Do I need an account?add

No, the tool is free and works without signing in.

Educational only. This tool does not provide financial, investment, legal, or trading advice. Trading and investing involve risk. Verify information independently and make your own decisions.