Premium Discount Zone Calculator
Calculate premium and discount zones using the range equilibrium for ICT smart money trading. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Equilibrium = Swing Low + (Swing High - Swing Low) x 0.5
The equilibrium divides the range into premium (above) and discount (below) zones. Prices above the midpoint are in premium territory where sells are favored. Prices below are in discount territory where buys are favored. Fibonacci levels within the range provide additional precision for entry targeting.
Worked Examples
Example 1: EUR/USD Daily Range Analysis
Problem: EUR/USD has a swing high at 1.1200 and swing low at 1.0800. Current price is 1.0900. Determine the zone and ideal trade direction.
Solution: Range = 1.1200 - 1.0800 = 0.0400 (400 pips)\nEquilibrium = 1.0800 + 0.0400 x 0.5 = 1.1000\nPosition = (1.0900 - 1.0800) / 0.0400 = 25%\nZone = Shallow Discount (below equilibrium)\nFib 61.8% = 1.1200 - 0.0400 x 0.618 = 1.0953\nFib 78.6% = 1.1200 - 0.0400 x 0.786 = 1.0886
Result: Price at 1.0900 is in the Shallow Discount zone (25%), favoring long entries. OTE zone: 1.0886 - 1.0953.
Example 2: GBP/USD Premium Zone Sell Setup
Problem: GBP/USD swing high at 1.2750, swing low at 1.2450. Price has rallied to 1.2680. Should you sell?
Solution: Range = 1.2750 - 1.2450 = 0.0300 (300 pips)\nEquilibrium = 1.2450 + 0.0300 x 0.5 = 1.2600\nPosition = (1.2680 - 1.2450) / 0.0300 = 76.7%\nZone = Deep Premium (above 75%)\nDistance above equilibrium = 80 pips\nDeep premium starts at 1.2675
Result: Price at 1.2680 is in the Deep Premium zone (76.7%), ideal for short entries with targets toward equilibrium at 1.2600.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are premium and discount zones in ICT trading?
Premium and discount zones are price areas defined relative to a trading range, a concept popularized by ICT (Inner Circle Trader) and used in Smart Money Concepts (SMC). The range is divided at the 50% equilibrium level. Prices above equilibrium are in the premium zone, where smart money typically looks to sell. Prices below equilibrium are in the discount zone, where institutional traders look to buy. This framework helps traders align entries with institutional order flow rather than chasing price at unfavorable levels. The concept mirrors value investing logic where you buy below fair value and sell above it.
Why should traders buy in discount and sell in premium?
Buying in the discount zone and selling in the premium zone aligns your trades with how institutional traders and market makers operate. Large institutions accumulate long positions at discounted prices below fair value and distribute (sell) positions at premium prices above fair value. By following this framework, retail traders improve their risk-to-reward ratio because entries in the discount zone naturally have tighter stop losses and wider profit targets. Conversely, selling in the premium zone offers better reward potential to the downside. This approach reduces the common retail mistake of buying high in excitement and selling low in panic.
What is the difference between deep and shallow premium or discount?
The range is subdivided into four quartiles to give more precision. Deep discount covers the bottom 25% of the range (0-25%), offering the most favorable buy entries. Shallow discount covers 25-50%, still below equilibrium but less optimal. Shallow premium covers 50-75%, moderately overpriced. Deep premium covers 75-100%, the most extreme sell zone. Professional ICT traders prefer deep discount for buys and deep premium for sells because these areas provide the best risk-to-reward ratios. Shallow zones may still be tradeable but typically require additional confluence factors like order blocks or fair value gaps to justify entries.
How do Fibonacci levels relate to premium and discount zones?
Fibonacci retracement levels map directly onto the premium-discount framework and provide additional precision. The 50% Fibonacci level equals the equilibrium point. The 61.8% and 78.6% retracement levels fall within the discount zone and represent optimal trade entry (OTE) areas favored by ICT traders. The 23.6% and 38.2% levels sit in the premium zone. When a bullish move retraces to the 61.8-78.6% Fibonacci zone, price is in deep discount, offering high-probability long entries. These Fibonacci confluences with premium-discount zones create stronger trade setups because multiple analytical frameworks align at the same price levels.
What timeframe should I use for premium and discount zone analysis?
The best practice is to use a multi-timeframe approach. Start with the higher timeframe (HTF) such as the daily or 4-hour chart to identify the major swing high and swing low that defines the overall range. Then use lower timeframes like the 1-hour or 15-minute chart to find precise entries within the HTF discount or premium zone. For example, if the daily chart shows price in a discount zone, look for bullish entry patterns on the 15-minute chart. Higher timeframe zones carry more weight because they represent larger institutional positions and broader market structure. Intraday traders might use 4-hour ranges with 5-minute entries.
Can premium and discount zones be applied to all markets?
Yes, premium and discount zones work across all liquid financial markets including forex, stocks, indices, commodities, and cryptocurrency. The concept is universal because it reflects fundamental market mechanics of institutional accumulation and distribution that occur everywhere large capital flows. In forex, these zones are calculated using pip values. In stocks and crypto, standard price points apply. The key requirement is that the market must have sufficient liquidity for institutional participation, as the framework is based on smart money behavior. Less liquid markets like penny stocks may not respect these zones as reliably because institutional involvement is minimal.