The support and resistance levels desks watch — Classic, Fibonacci and Camarilla, daily or weekly — computed from the last completed session, with the live price slotted onto the ladder.
Pick a coin, choose daily or weekly, and select a method. The calculator pulls the last completed session's high, low and close and prints a ladder of levels with the live price slotted onto it. The central pivot (P) is the session's reference: trading above it leans bullish, below it bearish. Treat R1–R3 as resistance where rallies may stall or reverse, and S1–S3 as support where dips may hold. Many traders watch for a reaction at the nearest level, take entries on a hold or break, and place stops just beyond the next level. Camarilla suits tight mean-reversion scalps; Classic and Fibonacci suit wider swing setups. Always confirm with price action and risk-manage every trade.
What are pivot points?
Pivot points are a set of support and resistance levels derived from a previous session's price action. The central pivot (P) acts as a reference for the day's bias, while the levels above (R1, R2, R3) and below (S1, S2, S3) mark where price is likely to find resistance or support. Traders use them to plan entries, stops and targets.
What is the difference between Classic, Fibonacci and Camarilla pivots?
Classic (floor-trader) pivots space the levels evenly using the range above and below the central pivot. Fibonacci pivots place R1/S1, R2/S2 and R3/S3 at 0.382, 0.618 and 1.0 of the prior range, so the levels cluster nearer the pivot. Camarilla pivots use tight multipliers anchored on the close, producing closely-packed intraday levels favoured by mean-reversion traders.
How are the daily levels calculated?
The daily levels are computed from the previous completed session's high, low and close. Those three values feed the chosen formula (Classic, Fibonacci or Camarilla) to produce the central pivot plus the resistance and support levels for the current session.