Fibonacci retracement is one of the most widely used technical analysis tools by Indian traders on Nifty 50, Bank Nifty, and individual stocks. It helps you identify likely support and resistance zones during a price pullback, so you can plan entries, exits, and stop losses with better timing.
This guide walks through what Fibonacci retracement is, the five levels you actually need to watch, how to draw them on TradingView and Zerodha Kite, a real Nifty 50 example, and the most common mistakes new traders make.
What Is Fibonacci Retracement?
Fibonacci retracement is a method of marking horizontal lines on a price chart at specific percentages of a prior price move. The percentages come from the Fibonacci sequence (0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21...), where each number is the sum of the previous two.
The ratios that matter for trading are derived from dividing numbers in the sequence:
- 23.6% = a number divided by the one three places ahead (e.g., 21 / 89)
- 38.2% = a number divided by the one two places ahead (e.g., 21 / 55)
- 50% = not a true Fibonacci ratio, but added by Charles Dow as a halfway level
- 61.8% = the "golden ratio", a number divided by the next one (e.g., 21 / 34)
- 78.6% = the square root of 61.8%
You apply these levels to any price move (high to low or low to high) to find probable reversal zones during a pullback.
Why Fibonacci Levels Work in Markets
Fibonacci levels are not magic. They work for two reasons:
- Self-fulfilling prophecy: Thousands of traders watch the same 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8% levels. When price hits one, many traders place buy or sell orders together, and that clustering of orders creates real support or resistance.
- Natural human behaviour: Markets are driven by fear and greed. Pullbacks tend to retrace one third to two thirds of the prior move before continuation. Fibonacci just gives you precise marks for those zones.
The 5 Fibonacci Retracement Levels Explained
23.6% Level
The shallowest retracement. If price holds here in a strong uptrend, the trend is very strong. Often used as a first add-on entry for trend-following traders.
38.2% Level
The most common shallow retracement in healthy trends. On Nifty 50, swing traders often look for first signs of reversal here.
50% Level
Not a Fibonacci number, but psychologically powerful. A 50% retracement is the textbook "halfway point". Many price reversals happen at this level on Bank Nifty and large-cap stocks.
61.8% Level (Golden Ratio)
The most important level. If price holds here, the prior trend is intact. If it breaks, the trend is likely reversing. Most professional traders set their stop loss just beyond 61.8%.
78.6% Level
The deepest retracement still considered "in the trend". Beyond this, the move is usually a full reversal, not a pullback.
How to Draw Fibonacci Retracement on TradingView
- Open your chart (Nifty 50, Bank Nifty, or any stock) on TradingView
- Click the Fib Retracement tool in the left sidebar (or press Alt + F)
- For an uptrend pullback: click the swing low first, then drag to the swing high
- For a downtrend pullback: click the swing high first, then drag to the swing low
- Lines auto-draw at 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, and 78.6%
How to Draw Fibonacci on Zerodha Kite
- Open the chart for any stock or index
- Click the drawing tools icon (top toolbar)
- Select Fibonacci Retracement
- Click and drag from the swing low to the swing high (or vice versa)
- Levels appear automatically
Real Example: Nifty 50 Fibonacci Retracement
Let's say Nifty 50 rallied from 21,500 (swing low) to 23,000 (swing high). The total move is 1,500 points. The retracement levels would be:
| Fib Level | Calculation | Nifty Price |
|---|---|---|
| 23.6% | 23,000 - (1,500 × 0.236) | 22,646 |
| 38.2% | 23,000 - (1,500 × 0.382) | 22,427 |
| 50.0% | 23,000 - (1,500 × 0.500) | 22,250 |
| 61.8% | 23,000 - (1,500 × 0.618) | 22,073 |
| 78.6% | 23,000 - (1,500 × 0.786) | 21,821 |
If Nifty pulls back to 22,250 (50%) and shows a bullish reversal candle (hammer, engulfing, or pin bar), that is a textbook long entry. Stop loss goes below 22,073 (61.8%). Targets are the prior swing high (23,000) and beyond using Fibonacci extensions.
Fibonacci Extension: Predicting Targets
Once price breaks past the prior swing high, Fibonacci extension levels project where it might go next. The most useful extensions are:
- 127.2% = first target after a successful retracement
- 161.8% = the golden extension, common profit-taking zone
- 261.8% = strong trend continuation target
Continuing the Nifty example above, if price reverses from 22,250 and breaks 23,000, extensions point to 23,468 (127.2%) and 23,927 (161.8%) as likely profit targets.
5 Mistakes to Avoid With Fibonacci Retracement
1. Drawing on the Wrong Swing
Always pick a clear, significant swing. Drawing Fibonacci on tiny intraday wiggles gives meaningless levels.
2. Trading Fib Levels in Isolation
Fibonacci alone is not a strategy. Combine it with candlestick patterns, volume confirmation, or moving average support for higher accuracy.
3. Ignoring the Larger Trend
Fibonacci works best in trending markets. In sideways or choppy markets, the levels get whipsawed and produce false signals.
4. Setting Stop Losses Exactly at the Fib Level
Markets often spike just past key levels to hunt stop losses. Place stops a few points beyond the Fib level, not exactly on it.
5. Forgetting Time Frame Alignment
A 61.8% retracement on a daily chart is far more reliable than on a 5-minute chart. Higher time frames give stronger signals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Fibonacci level is most important for trading?
The 61.8% level (golden ratio) is the most watched. If price holds here, the trend is intact. Many traders use 50% and 61.8% together as the primary "buying zone" in an uptrend.
Can I use Fibonacci retracement for intraday trading?
Yes, but use it on the 15-minute or 1-hour chart, not the 1-minute chart. Lower time frames produce too much noise. Many Bank Nifty intraday traders use Fibonacci on the 15-minute chart for swing entries.
Does Fibonacci retracement work on Indian stocks?
Yes. Fibonacci levels are universal and work on Nifty 50, Bank Nifty, individual large-caps like Reliance, HDFC Bank, TCS, and even mid-caps. The principles are the same across all liquid markets.
What is the difference between Fibonacci retracement and extension?
Retracement levels (23.6% to 78.6%) tell you where a pullback might end inside an existing trend. Extension levels (127.2%, 161.8%, 261.8%) tell you where the trend might extend after the pullback completes.
Learn Fibonacci Trading at QIFM Jaipur
Reading about Fibonacci is one thing. Applying it on live Nifty and Bank Nifty charts under expert guidance is what separates profitable traders from the rest. At QIFM, our Technical Analysis course in Jaipur covers Fibonacci retracement, extension, and confluence with other indicators in 30+ live sessions. We also run option trading courses where Fibonacci is used to time strike price selection.
Want to test it before you enroll? Book a 2-day FREE demo class with Nitin Khandelwal Sir at our Vaishali Nagar centre or join live online from anywhere in India.

