triple top pattern: how to identify and trade it with real data

triple top pattern — three peaks at resistance with neckline break showing bearish reversal setup on a futures chart
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the triple top is one of those chart patterns that every technical analysis resource mentions — but almost none of them tell you how often it actually works.

three pushes to the same resistance level, each one failing. it looks clean on a textbook chart. in live markets, it's messier. the highs don't always line up perfectly. the neckline isn't always obvious. and the "breakout" below the neckline sometimes reverses right back up.

so does the triple top pattern actually work? and more importantly — how do you trade it when you see one forming? that's what we're going to cover here, using real market behavior instead of textbook diagrams.

table of contents

  • what is a triple top pattern
  • how to identify a triple top on a chart
  • why triple tops form — the logic behind the pattern
  • triple top vs double top: what's the difference
  • how to trade a triple top pattern
  • when triple tops fail — and what to watch for
  • triple top pattern in futures trading
  • common mistakes traders make with triple tops
  • key takeaways

what is a triple top pattern

a triple top pattern is a bearish reversal formation. it forms when price pushes up to a resistance level three times and fails to break through each time. after the third rejection, price breaks below the support level (often called the "neckline") and typically moves lower. this triple top reversal is one of the more well-known bearish setups in technical analysis.

the pattern looks like three roughly equal peaks with two pullbacks in between. when the neckline — the support level connecting the pullback lows — breaks, that's the signal most traders act on.

here's the basic structure:

  • peak 1: price rallies to a resistance level and pulls back
  • peak 2: price rallies back to roughly the same level and pulls back again
  • peak 3: price makes a third attempt at the same level and fails
  • neckline break: price drops below the support connecting the pullback lows

the triple top chart pattern tells you something specific: buyers tried three times to push through that level and couldn't. each failed attempt weakens buying pressure at that price. when the neckline finally breaks, the sellers have taken control.

how to identify a triple top on a chart

in textbooks, triple tops look perfectly symmetrical. in real markets, the triple top pattern is almost never that clean. here's what to actually look for:

the three peaks don't need to be exact

the highs should be at approximately the same level — but "approximately" is doing real work here. if peak 1 is at 5,200 on NQ, peak 2 might be at 5,210, and peak 3 at 5,195. that's still a triple top. you're looking for a zone of resistance, not a single price point.

the pullbacks should reach a common support area

the two pullbacks between the three peaks should find support at roughly the same level. this creates the neckline. if the pullbacks are at completely different levels, the pattern is less reliable.

time between peaks matters

a triple top pattern that forms over 3 days is very different from one that forms over 3 hours. longer timeframes generally produce more reliable patterns because more market participants are involved. on a 5-minute chart, what looks like a triple top might just be noise.

volume typically decreases on each peak

this isn't a hard rule, but declining volume on successive peaks supports the triple top thesis. it means fewer buyers are willing to push price back to that level each time — momentum is fading.

why triple tops form — the logic behind the pattern

chart patterns aren't magic. they reflect the behavior of real participants making real decisions.

a triple top pattern forms because there's a price level where sellers consistently overpower buyers. here's what's happening at each stage:

  • peak 1: price hits resistance and sellers step in. traders who bought lower are taking profits. new shorts enter. price pulls back.
  • peak 2: buyers try again. maybe there's a catalyst — a news event, a technical level, or just momentum. but when price reaches that same area, the same thing happens. sellers overpower buyers. price pulls back again.
  • peak 3: by the third attempt, something has shifted. the buyers who were aggressive on peak 1 and 2 are getting tired. some have already taken losses on the pullbacks. the third push to resistance often has less volume and less conviction. when it fails again, the message is clear — this level isn't breaking.
  • neckline break: the traders who were buying the dips between peaks start bailing. their support level (the neckline) breaks, stop losses get triggered, and the selling accelerates.

that's why the triple top reversal can produce sharp moves once the neckline breaks — there's a cascade of longs exiting and new shorts entering at the same time.

triple top vs double top: what's the difference

the double top and triple top chart pattern are close cousins. both are bearish reversal patterns. the main differences:

structure:

  • double top: 2 peaks at resistance, 1 pullback, neckline break
  • triple top: 3 peaks at resistance, 2 pullbacks, neckline break

implication:

  • the triple top is generally considered a stronger reversal signal because price tested resistance an additional time and still failed. three rejections at the same level is more decisive than two

frequency:

  • double tops are more common. triple tops are rarer because price doesn't always make it back to resistance a third time — sometimes the selling starts after just two attempts

trading approach:

  • the entry logic is the same for both — you're looking for the neckline break. the difference is that triple tops give you more time to identify the pattern and plan your trade

for a broader look at chart patterns including double tops, see our chart patterns guide.

triple top vs triple bottom

the triple bottom pattern is the bullish mirror image of the triple top. instead of three failed pushes to resistance, the triple bottom pattern forms when price tests the same support level three times and bounces each time. after the third bounce, price breaks above the resistance connecting the rally highs and typically moves higher.

the trading logic is identical but reversed — a triple bottom pattern signals that sellers have exhausted their attempts to push through support. if you understand how the triple top chart pattern works, you already understand the triple bottom. the only difference is direction.

both the triple top pattern and the triple bottom pattern are considered strong reversal signals because of the three-test structure. the more times a level gets tested and holds, the more significant the eventual breakout becomes.

how to trade a triple top pattern

step 1: identify the pattern

look for three peaks at roughly the same resistance level with pullbacks to a common support zone. confirm that volume is declining on successive peaks if possible. the pattern isn't confirmed until the neckline breaks — don't front-run it.

step 2: wait for the neckline break

the neckline is the support level connecting the pullback lows between the peaks. the traditional entry is a short position when price closes below the neckline. some traders wait for a retest of the broken neckline (now resistance) before entering — this gives a better entry but you might miss the move if price doesn't come back.

step 3: set your target

the textbook target for a triple top is the distance from the peaks to the neckline, projected downward from the neckline break. if the peaks are at 5,200 and the neckline is at 5,100, the measured target is 5,000.

this is a guideline, not a certainty. real price doesn't always reach the measured move. using data — like how often price actually reaches specific extension levels after a breakdown — gives you a more realistic expectation.

step 4: manage your risk

place your stop above the neckline — or above the most recent peak if you want more room. for a data-driven approach to stop placement, check out our guide on how to set a stop loss. the triple top pattern is invalidated if price breaks back above the resistance zone. a triple top that breaks to the upside instead of the downside often produces a strong continuation higher.

step 5: validate with session and time-of-day data

if you're trading futures, the session matters. a triple top forming during the first hour of the NY session carries different weight than one forming during the overnight session. layer session data on top of the pattern for better context.

when triple tops fail — and what to watch for

not every triple top leads to a breakdown. sometimes price pushes through resistance on the fourth attempt — or reverses after a brief neckline break. here's what increases the chance of failure:

  • volume increases on peak 3. if the third push to resistance has more volume than the first two, that's a warning sign. buyers are getting more aggressive, not less
  • the neckline break is shallow. if price barely dips below the neckline and immediately bounces, the selling pressure isn't strong enough. some traders wait for a close below the neckline plus a certain distance before entering
  • the broader trend is strongly bullish. a triple top in the middle of a strong uptrend is fighting the bigger picture. reversal patterns work best when they form near the end of a move, not during a strong trend
  • news or catalyst approaching. if a major economic release is coming, the pattern might get overridden by the event. triple tops formed right before FOMC or CPI releases carry extra uncertainty

when a triple top fails and price breaks above resistance, it can reverse into a powerful long move. this is sometimes called a "triple top breakout" — the trapped shorts who entered on the neckline break are now covering, adding fuel to the move higher.

triple top pattern in futures trading

triple tops show up across all markets — stocks, forex, crypto, futures. but there are a few things specific to futures trading that are worth noting.

session context matters

a triple top forming entirely within the NY session is more meaningful than one spanning the overnight and NY session. the volume and participation during the NY session make the pattern more reliable. if one of the three peaks happened at 2:00 AM ET during thin overnight volume, that peak carries less weight.

combine with edgeful data

the triple top is a price pattern — it tells you about structure. but it doesn't tell you about the underlying data for that ticker and session. if you see a triple top forming on NQ during the NY session, check what edgeful's reports say about the current conditions:

  • is the IB already broken? the IB breakout direction could confirm or conflict with the triple top
  • what does the session breakout data say? if the session breakout report shows price rarely makes new lows after this time of day, the triple top breakdown is fighting the data
  • what's the overnight context? a gap up that hasn't filled might provide support below the neckline

pattern recognition plus data is a stronger approach than pattern recognition alone.

timeframe considerations

on a 1-minute chart, "triple tops" form constantly — most of them are noise. the pattern becomes more meaningful on 15-minute, 30-minute, and daily timeframes. for futures day traders, the 15-minute or 30-minute chart is usually the best balance of signal and frequency.

common mistakes traders make with triple tops

mistake 1: entering before the neckline breaks

the triple top is not confirmed until the neckline breaks. entering a short just because price touched resistance for the third time is anticipating the pattern, not trading it. price could just as easily break through on the fourth attempt.

mistake 2: ignoring the broader trend

a triple top in a strong uptrend has a lower success rate than one forming after an extended rally that's losing steam. context matters. if the trend is clearly bullish, a triple top might just be consolidation before the next leg higher.

mistake 3: using fixed targets without checking the data

the "measured move" target is a starting point, not a rule. real price action doesn't always respect textbook measurements. check what the data shows for your ticker and timeframe — how far does price typically move after breaking key support levels? that gives you a more realistic target than a textbook formula.

mistake 4: trading triple tops on low timeframes during thin volume

a triple top on a 5-minute chart during the asian session is barely a pattern. the lower the timeframe and the thinner the volume, the less reliable any chart pattern becomes. stick to timeframes and sessions where there's enough participation to make the pattern meaningful.

key takeaways

  • the triple top is a bearish reversal pattern — three pushes to the same resistance level, all failing, followed by a break below the neckline
  • the pattern reflects real market dynamics — buyers losing conviction after repeated failures at a price level
  • wait for the neckline break before entering. front-running the pattern is one of the most common mistakes
  • the textbook measured move target (distance from peaks to neckline, projected downward) is a guideline — not a certainty. use session data to set realistic targets
  • triple tops on higher timeframes (15-min, 30-min, daily) are more reliable than those on 1-minute or 5-minute charts
  • in futures trading, layer session context and edgeful report data on top of the pattern for better decision-making
  • when triple tops fail, they can produce strong moves in the opposite direction — always manage your risk with a clear stop

edgeful provides historical performance data to help traders make informed decisions. this does not constitute financial advice. past performance is not indicative of future results. all trading involves risk — always do your own analysis and manage your risk accordingly.

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