Tips for Beginners
June 28, 2026

Why the Best Breakouts Come After Multiple Failed Attempts

Each test of a resistance level wears it down, and the cleanest breakouts often come after several failed attempts.

When price repeatedly tests a resistance level, each test is actually weakening that ceiling, and understanding this dynamic can give you an edge in timing breakout entries.

Think of resistance like a wall. The first time price slams into it, the wall holds firm. The second time, cracks start to form. By the third test, the wall is ready to crumble. Here is why that happens:

Sellers get exhausted. Every time price reaches resistance, sellers step in. But each test absorbs more of that selling pressure. Eventually, there simply aren't enough sellers left to hold the line.

Buyers gain confidence. Repeated tests signal persistent demand. Buyers see price coming back to the same level again and again and interpret it as strength. That growing conviction translates into more aggressive buying on the next push.

Stop losses cluster above resistance. Each failed breakout adds more short positions with stops placed just above the resistance level. When price finally punches through, those stops trigger a cascade of buy orders that fuels the move higher.

This is why breakouts after three or more tests of resistance tend to produce the most explosive moves. The energy has been building with each attempt, and when the dam finally breaks, all of that pent-up pressure releases at once.

TradeIntel's Psychological Level tool is designed to highlight this exact dynamic. For any ticker, it automatically identifies key round-number levels and counts how many times price has tested or touched each level before eventually breaking through. A higher touch count indicates the market spent more time and effort overcoming that level, which can provide useful context when evaluating the strength of a potential breakout.

More from Tips for Beginners

Plain-English guides for traders who are just getting started.

Browse Tips for Beginners

Comments

Loading comments…