This tool is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing shown here — price levels, trendlines, moving averages, on-chain metrics, or confluence zones — is financial, investment, or trading advice, and none of it should be interpreted as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any asset.
All data is pulled from third-party public APIs (listed in "Data sources & credits" below) and may be delayed, incomplete, or inaccurate. No guarantee is made as to its correctness or timeliness.
Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile. Historical patterns, levels, and trendlines do not predict future price movement. Any decisions you make based on information from this tool are entirely your own responsibility — the creator of this tool accepts no liability for any losses, financial or otherwise, resulting from its use.
This tool is provided "as is," without warranty of any kind. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Binance, Coinbase, Bitstamp, Kraken, or BitView. If you're making real financial decisions, consult a licensed financial advisor and do your own research.
The vertical axis is a true price axis — vertical position corresponds directly to price. The orange line marks the current BTC price.
Each level is color-coded: green for support-side, red for resistance-side, plus separate colors for moving averages and on-chain metrics (see Tag structure). Tap or hover a level for its full name and price.
Confluence zones (shaded bands) mark where multiple levels converge within a tight price range. Shading brightens in four steps — 2, 3, 4, and 5+ converging levels — with borders escalating from dashed to solid as well; more convergence means a more significant zone. Hover a zone to see its individual levels.
When levels sit too close together to show individually, they collapse into a ×N badge. This is just for readability — tap to see the individual levels.
Green % = above current price. Red % = below. Amber = within 0.8%.
Ctrl+scroll (or Cmd+scroll on Mac) zooms the price axis; click-drag pans it. While zoomed or panned, all levels are shown regardless of the distance filter.
Tap the chart icon near the top of the page to open the chart for the current timeframe (Daily, Weekly, or Monthly).
The chart shows candles together with moving averages, on-chain levels, trendlines, and H-levels.
Pinch (or Ctrl/Cmd+scroll) to zoom; drag to pan. The default view includes every trendline anchor for that timeframe, with a small margin on each side and space on the right for upcoming candles. Hold or hover a candle to see its date and OHLC values.
Use the legend to show or hide individual moving averages, on-chain levels, trendlines, or H-levels — or tap a group label (e.g. "Trends") to toggle the whole group at once.
A solid trendline is anchored to candle closes; a dashed trendline is anchored to wicks (highs/lows).
Trendlines are detected automatically across three timeframes — Daily, Weekly, and Monthly — shown as DTR#/DTS# (Daily), WTR#/WTS# (Weekly), and MTR#/MTS# (Monthly), where R = resistance, S = support.
The # is a rank from an internal scoring heuristic — 1 is the strongest candidate, but adjacent ranks (e.g. DTR1 vs DTR2) can be close in quality. Treat the ranking as a rough guide, not a precise measure.
Toggle individual lines, or an entire timeframe/type group at once, via the chart legend. Open the chart to see each line's anchor points and how it projects forward.
GDR#/GDS# (Daily), GWR#/GWS# (Weekly), and GMR#/GMS# (Monthly) are trendlines detected on the BTC/XAUt (Bitcoin priced in gold) ratio chart, translated back into implied BTC/USDT values using gold's actual USD price history.
They appear in yellow on both the BTC/USDT chart and the ladder, so they're visually distinct from native BTC trendlines (green/red) and on-chain levels (amber). A rank-1 line (the top-scoring of its type) is toggled on by default; rank-2 is shown but off.
Toggle individual lines via the chart legend, or use the Trends group and its Daily/Weekly/Monthly sub-filters to show or hide them together with native trendlines.
H1–Hn are horizontal support/resistance levels derived from weekly price history — price zones where Bitcoin has repeatedly reversed, consolidated, or been defended in the past.
H1 is the strongest by an internal scoring heuristic, but as with trendlines, treat the ranking as a rough guide — a lower-numbered level isn't always meaningfully stronger than a nearby higher-numbered one. Read the overall picture of where levels cluster rather than focusing on individual ranks.
H-levels appear alongside trendlines on the chart and can be toggled individually, or together with trendlines via the chart legend's Trends group.
Realized Price (RP) — Average acquisition price of all BTC, weighted by last on-chain movement. Key long-term support in bear markets.
STH Cost Basis (STHCB) — Cost basis of short-term holders (coins moved within ~155 days). Reflects recent speculative positioning.
LTH Cost Basis (LTHCB) — Cost basis of long-term holders (coins unmoved 155+ days). Associated with macro accumulation zones.
True Market Mean (TMM) — Economically weighted cost basis from Cointime Economics, a framework developed by David Puell and James Check. Identifies macro equilibrium zones.
Toggling State adds a colored band across the ladder. Each vertical position is colored according to a five-state classification — CAP (Capitulation), ACC (Accumulation), NEU (Neutral), PRE (Premium), and DIS (Distribution) — based on where price sits relative to two historical cost-basis ratios (price/TMM and price/STHCB, each ranked against their own history), combined with SOPR (whether coins currently moving on-chain are realizing a profit or a loss on average).
The badge shows which state current price falls into; the band shows where each state's territory currently sits across the visible price range.
These are descriptive labels for how current conditions compare to their own history — they are not trading signals or recommendations.
URPD-R (Unrealized Realized Price Distribution, Realized cap weighted) shows how much Bitcoin cost basis is concentrated at each price level.
Each horizontal bar represents a $500 price bin (or $1,000 at All range). Bar width is proportional to the total realized cap of all Bitcoin last moved within that price range — a wider bar means more BTC was acquired near that price, making it a significant support or resistance zone.
The vertical reference line marks where the 100% (strongest) bin would reach. All bars are drawn relative to this fixed scale, so the reference line is always visible even when the strongest bin is outside the current window. Normalization is global across the full Bitcoin distribution.
Toggle ▦ URPD to show or hide the overlay.
Binance (binance.com) — historical price candles for all moving averages, trendlines, and horizontal S/R levels.
Coinbase (coinbase.com), Bitstamp (bitstamp.net), Kraken (kraken.com) — current spot price reference (median of available sources).
BitView (bitview.space) — on-chain valuation metrics (Realized Price, STH/LTH Cost Basis, True Market Mean).