How to read a price chart
Charts look complicated. They are not. This page explains the shapes, the numbers, and — honestly — what a chart can and cannot tell you.
A price chart shows where a price has been — nothing more. Each candle sums up one slice of time: where the price started, where it ended, and how far it moved in between. A chart is a record of the past, not a map of the future.
What one candle shows
Most trading charts are made of small shapes called candles (or candlesticks). One candle is one block of time. Its body and thin lines pack four numbers into one picture:
- Open
- The price at the moment this block of time started.
- Close
- The price at the moment this block of time ended.
- High
- The highest price reached during that time. It is the tip of the thin line above the body.
- Low
- How far down the price went during that time. It is the tip of the thin line below the body.
The colour tells you the direction. A green candle means the price ended higher than it started — it went up during that time. A red candle means the price ended lower — it went down. That is the whole trick — once you see it, every chart reads the same way.
Timeframes, in plain words
A timeframe is simply how much time one candle covers. You choose it with a button on the chart, usually marked M1, H1, D1 and so on:
- On a 1-minute chart, each candle is one minute of trading.
- On a 1-hour chart, each candle is one hour.
- On a 1-day chart, each candle is one whole day.
Same price, same market — just zoomed in or out. Short timeframes look busy and jumpy; longer ones look calmer, because each candle averages out many small moves.
What a chart really tells you — and what it doesn't
Here is the honest part, and it matters more than everything above:
- A chart shows where the price went. That part is real. You can see history clearly: rises, falls, quiet periods, wild days.
- Nobody reliably knows where the price will go next. Not from a chart, not from a feeling, not from someone online who sounds confident. Prices move on news and on millions of decisions that have not happened yet.
- Be careful with anyone who says otherwise. If a person or a service claims they can tell you the next move for certain, they are selling certainty that does not exist.
You can still trade without predicting. Careful traders use charts to understand what is happening and to plan their risk — not to see the future.
What a beginner should actually look at
Charts come with many extra tools — coloured lines, arrows, and maths overlays called indicators. Ignore all of them for now. On any chart, three things are worth your attention:
1. The current price
Usually a line or number at the right edge. Watch how it moves — tiny steps, sudden jumps. Getting a feel for this rhythm costs nothing and is a real skill.
2. The spread
The spread is the small gap between the price you can buy at and the price you can sell at. It is the main cost of a trade — you start every trade that little bit behind. The platform shows both prices, so you can see the gap yourself.
3. Where your stop-loss would go
A stop-loss is an instruction that closes your trade automatically if the price moves against you by more than you chose. Before any trade, look at the chart and ask: “At what price would I want this closed?” If you cannot answer, you are not ready to place that trade — and that is useful to know.
Try it on a demo — just watch
You do not need to trade anything to learn charts. A demo account gives you virtual money, so you can explore live charts with zero cost.
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Open a free demo account
Email and password — no documents needed. Mistakes cost nothing there.
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Open the EUR/USD chart
It is a heavily traded currency pair, so there is always something happening on it.
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Just watch for 10 minutes
No clicking, no trading. Switch between the 1-minute and 1-hour timeframes. Find the spread. Watch candles form and change colour. That is a genuinely useful first lesson.
Common questions
Do chart patterns predict the future?
No — not reliably. Patterns describe what often happened after similar shapes in the past, and some traders use them as one input when planning a trade. But no shape on a chart makes the next move certain, and no honest person will promise that. Treat any “this pattern means the price will rise” claim with doubt.
Which timeframe should a beginner watch?
Start with the 1-hour or 1-day chart. Longer timeframes move calmly, so you can think without pressure. The 1-minute chart jumps constantly and pushes people into rushed decisions — look at it to learn what it feels like, but do not live there as a beginner.
Keep going
Trading words
Pip, lot, spread, leverage — every term from this page, explained in plain language.
Open the dictionaryYour first trade
A calm walkthrough of your very first trade — on a demo, where mistakes are free.
See the stepsReady to see a live chart?
Open a free demo account at Exness, pull up EUR/USD, and watch for 10 minutes. Virtual money, no time limit — practice first, always.
Open a free demo at Exness