What it means
A timeframe controls how price data is grouped and shown on a trading chart. Shorter timeframes show more detailed movement over smaller intervals, while longer timeframes show broader market context over a wider period.
Why it matters in live markets
The same market can look very different across different timeframes. A move that looks sharp on a short-term chart may appear minor on a longer-term chart. Understanding timeframe context helps traders read charts more carefully and avoid focusing too heavily on one small section of price movement.
Key points
- A timeframe sets the interval used to display price movement on a chart.
- Shorter timeframes show more detail but can also contain more market noise.
- Longer timeframes can help provide broader context.
- The same market may appear different depending on the timeframe selected.
- Timeframes help organise chart review, but they do not predict future price movement.
Example
A one-minute chart shows price movement in very small intervals, while a daily chart groups price movement into one candle or bar per day. Both show the same market, but from very different perspectives.
Related glossary terms
Candlestick chart, Volatility, Market noise, Trend, Liquidity
Where you will see it
You will usually see timeframes discussed in platform guides, chart tutorials, technical analysis explainers, and MT4 or MT5 education content.