TimelessMarket Theory
Educational only — not financial advice. The creator warns tags are not signals; fading bands fails in trends. Range-only, and define risk.
Strategy Playbook · Mean reversion

Bollinger Band Fade

Fade band extremes back to the mean — but only inside a confirmed range.

Concepts: Bollinger Bands, ADX, Support & resistance

TypeMean reversion
BiasLong or short
TimeframeAny
StyleDiscretionary

1 The Edge — and the big caveat

Revert to the mean — in a range only

In a sideways market, a tag of the outer Bollinger Band means price is statistically stretched relative to its own recent volatility — and tends to revert toward the middle band. This playbook fades those extremes back to the mean.

Read this first. The creator, John Bollinger, warns that "tags of the bands are tags, not signals." Fading bands works only in ranges and fails badly in trends, where price "walks the band." This is a context-dependent tactic, not a standalone edge.

2 Where it works — and doesn't

Range yes, trend never

Works best when…

  • A clear, sideways range (flat moving averages, low ADX).
  • A band tag with a reversal trigger (candle / divergence).
  • Quiet, news-free conditions.

Fails / avoid when…

  • Any trend — price walks the band and fades get run over.
  • A squeeze about to expand.
  • News-driven moves.
  • No range filter at all.

3 Setup checklist

All true before you act

4 The process

Fade to the middle

1

Entry

On a reversal trigger at the band (not the bare tag) — short the upper band, long the lower.

2

Stop (1R)

Just beyond the band / the recent swing extreme. Entry − stop = 1R — keep it tight.

3

Position size

Risk a small fixed % of the account; shares = risk ÷ 1R.

shares = (account × risk%) ÷ 1R
4

Exit & management

Target the middle band (the mean) or the opposite band; exit fast if price closes outside and keeps going (a trend may be starting).

5 Worked example (illustrative)

In R

Bollinger Band fade — only in a clear range Green = lower-band fade (long), red = upper-band fade (short), target the middle — RANGE ONLY. Never in a trend.
In a range, fades at the lower band (green, long) and upper band (red, short) target the middle band. The instant price stops respecting the bands, the range is breaking — stand aside.
Account / risk$25,000 · 1% = $250
Entry (reversal at lower band)$48.00
Stop (below band) — 1R$46.80 · 1R = $1.20
Size = $250 ÷ $1.20≈ 208 shares
Target (middle band), +1.3R$49.55 · +$325
If stopped: −1R− $250

6 Honest expectancy

The creator's own warning

This is the use John Bollinger explicitly cautions against when misapplied: a band tag is not a signal. Fading bands only has any edge inside a confirmed range, and a single trending move can erase a long string of small range-bound wins. Treat it as a low-conviction, context-gated tactic — always filtered by a trend check like ADX.

expectancy (R) = (win% × avg win) − (loss% × avg loss)

An expectation only when the range filter holds — never a guarantee.

7 Make it yours

Test before you trade

A no-risk validation routine

In replay, only take fades when ADX confirms a range, and require a reversal trigger at the band. Compare results in ranges vs (accidentally) in trends — you'll see immediately why the trend filter is non-negotiable.

8 Common mistakes

How traders blow this up