ATR (Average True Range)
Section: Indicators
Definition
Measures market volatility over N periods (default 14). Used for position sizing and stop-loss placement (e.g., stop at 1 × ATR from entry).
Concrete example
Example: EUR/USD ATR(14) = 60 pips on H1. Your stop should be sized to at least 1× ATR (60 pips) so normal volatility doesn't knock you out. Position size adjusts inversely — wider stop = smaller position.
Why it matters
Understanding "ATR (Average True Range)" is essential for Indicators on Pocket Option and most binary options or CFD platforms. It appears in the context of technical analysis and signal generation.
ATR(Average True Range): practical meaning for Pocket Option users
In this glossary, ATR(Average True Range) is treated as a practical technical analysis term, not only as a textbook definition. The useful question is whether ATR(Average True Range) describes market context, entry timing, confirmation, or a warning that the setup is weak. That is why the term should be read together with the current platform screen, account status, and the risk note shown on the relevant guide page.
If ATR(Average True Range) appears on a chart, it should help frame the decision, not replace the decision. A trader still needs to define entry, expiry, position size, and the invalidation point. This is especially important on affiliate and broker-review sites because a short definition can make a feature look simpler than it is. A better approach is to connect the word with evidence: screenshots, transaction history, platform terms, and the exact country or account context.
How to apply ATR(Average True Range) safely
- Find the source: compare the signal with trend, volatility, expiry time, and recent price behaviour before opening a position.
- Separate definition from promise: a glossary term explains a concept; it does not guarantee availability, payout, approval, or profit.
- Use the related guide: follow the internal links on this page when the term connects to deposits, withdrawals, verification, bonuses, indicators, or strategy testing.
Applied example
A careful user reads the definition, then checks where ATR(Average True Range) appears in the actual Pocket Option workflow. If it is part of an account or payment action, the user saves the visible status, reference number, date, and any support reply. If it is part of a chart or strategy decision, the user writes down entry logic, expiry, position size, and the condition that would invalidate the idea.
Common mistake
The common mistake is using one indicator or pattern as a standalone command instead of a condition that still needs confirmation. This matters because users often arrive from a very narrow query and need a direct answer, but Google also expects the page to prevent misunderstandings. A concise definition is helpful; a definition plus limitations, examples, and next steps is more useful.