Calculate pivot points and support/resistance levels using four methods: Classic, Woodie, Camarilla, and DeMark.
Pivot = (High + Low + Close) ÷ 3
Example: H=1.0900, L=1.0800, C=1.0860: Pivot = (1.0900 + 1.0800 + 1.0860) ÷ 3 = 1.0853
Pivot points are calculated from the previous period's high, low, and close prices. They identify potential support and resistance levels for the current trading session.
Classic (Floor Trader) pivots are the most widely used. Camarilla pivots work well for intraday range trading. Choose the method that matches your trading style.
Traders use the central pivot as a bias filter — bullish above, bearish below. Support levels (S1, S2, S3) are potential buy zones, while resistance levels (R1, R2, R3) are potential sell zones.
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Calculator results are estimates only — not financial advice. Trading involves significant risk of loss. Full risk disclosure.
Pivot Point (P)
1.0893
P = (High + Low + Close) / 3
| Level | Price | Try |
|---|---|---|
| R3 | 1.1097 | |
| R2 | 1.1023 | |
| R1 | 1.0967 | |
| P | 1.0893 | |
| S1 | 1.0837 | |
| S2 | 1.0763 | |
| S3 | 1.0707 |
Current Price Zone
Enter current market price to see zone analysis.
Standard pivots are the most widely used. Price tends to reverse at R1/S1 in ranging markets.