What it means
A breakout describes price moving outside a level or structure that had previously acted as a barrier. This could be a move above resistance, below support, outside a range, or beyond a trendline.
Why it matters in live markets
Breakouts matter because they show that price has moved beyond an area traders may have been watching. The move can suggest a change in market structure, but it does not guarantee continuation. Some breakouts hold, some pause, and others move back inside the earlier structure.
Key points
- A breakout is a move beyond a recognised chart level.
- Breakouts can occur above resistance or below support.
- A breakout may later be followed by a retest of the same area.
- Not every breakout continues.
- A breakout is a chart-reading concept, not a forecast.
Example
If price has repeatedly struggled near 1.3000 and then moves clearly above that area, traders may describe the move as a breakout above resistance.
Related glossary terms
Retest, Failed breakout, Support and resistance, Volatility, Liquidity
Where you will see it
You will usually see breakouts discussed in chart analysis, market-structure guides, technical analysis education, and trading platform tutorials.