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Break vs Sweep: How to Tell If Structure Is Breaking or Getting Swept

January 20, 20267 мин. чтения

Break vs Sweep: How to Tell If Structure Is Breaking or Getting Swept

A high gets broken. Traders who expected it to hold get stopped out. Traders who expected it to break enter positions. But only one side is right — and by the time most traders figure out which, the move has already happened.

The break-or-sweep question is one of the most critical decisions in real-time trading. Expectation order flow provides a systematic way to answer it.

The Problem

When price takes out a key level (a swing high or swing low), there are always two possibilities:

  1. Break of structure — price continues in the direction of the break
  2. Sweep — price reverses after taking the liquidity at that level

Both look identical at the moment of the break. The difference only becomes clear through what happens next — specifically, what happens at the next key level of supply or demand.

The Framework: Two-Level Confirmation

The rule is surprisingly simple:

Bullish Structure (High Gets Broken)

It's a break (continuation higher) if:

  • The high fails (gets broken)
  • Price returns to a level of demand
  • That demand holds
  • Price continues higher, breaking the next high

It's a sweep (reversal lower) if:

  • The high fails
  • Price returns to a level of demand
  • That demand ALSO fails
  • Supply takes control and price reverses

The key indicator: After the high breaks, watch what happens at demand. If demand holds → break confirmed. If demand fails → sweep confirmed.

Bearish Structure (Low Gets Broken)

It's a break (continuation lower) if:

  • The low fails (gets broken)
  • Price returns to a level of supply
  • That supply holds
  • Price continues lower, breaking the next low

It's a sweep (reversal higher) if:

  • The low fails
  • Price returns to a level of supply
  • That supply ALSO fails
  • Demand takes control and price reverses

Adding the Liquidity Layer

The break-or-sweep framework becomes even more powerful when combined with liquidity concepts.

When There's No Liquidity in the Leg

If there's no structural liquidity between the broken level and the next zone, remember from the early enticement framework: liquidity will either be built within the zone or the zone itself will be swept.

This creates a third scenario that often confuses traders:

  1. High breaks
  2. Price drops below demand (the zone gets swept)
  3. Now you need to evaluate the NEXT level

After a zone sweep, watch:

  • Does the last point of supply hold and push price lower? → The original break was real. This confirms a change of character and potential reversal.
  • Does price break through the last point of supply and continue higher? → The zone sweep was just enticement. The bullish trend continues.

This is where the framework gets its real power — it handles the complex scenarios that most traders can't process in real time.

The Order Flow Confirmation Chain

Here's the complete decision tree:

Step 1: Level Gets Taken

A high or low breaks. Don't react yet.

Step 2: Watch the Pullback

Price will retrace to the nearest supply (if a high broke) or demand (if a low broke).

Step 3: Evaluate the Reaction

  • Zone holds: The break is confirmed. Trade in the direction of the break.
  • Zone fails: The break may be a sweep. Proceed to Step 4.

Step 4: Evaluate the Next Level

  • Next-level holds (last point of supply/demand): Confirms the sweep. The original direction is invalidated.
  • Next-level fails: Confirms continuation. The zone failure was just internal range liquidity being swept.

Step 5: Order Flow Shift Confirmation

The final confirmation is a complete order flow shift:

  • Last point of demand fails → change of character → bearish reversal confirmed
  • Last point of supply fails → change of character → bullish reversal confirmed

Practical Application

Don't make the decision at the break. The break itself tells you nothing about continuation vs reversal. The information comes from what happens after — at the next level of supply or demand.

Wait for the two-level confirmation. Whether it takes minutes or hours, the second level is what confirms the first.

Use liquidity context. If you know there's no liquidity in the leg, expect a sweep or enticement before the real move. Don't get trapped by the initial zone failure.

Trade the confirmation, not the anticipation. Enter after the second level confirms, not when the first level breaks.

Common Mistakes

  1. Entering immediately on the break. Without waiting for demand/supply to confirm, you're gambling on direction.
  2. Panicking when the first zone fails. A zone failure after a level break is often just liquidity being swept — not a reversal.
  3. Ignoring the liquidity context. No liquidity in the leg = expect enticement. Don't enter the first zone touch.
  4. Waiting too long. The framework gives you the answer within 2-3 levels. If you're still unsure after that, you've missed the move — wait for the next setup.

Key Takeaway

Break vs sweep is answered by what happens next, not by the break itself. If the high breaks and demand holds → break confirmed. If both the high and demand fail → sweep. When zones get swept in between, add one more level to the confirmation chain. This systematic approach replaces guessing with a clear decision framework that works in real time.


Learn about expectation order flow for the complete directional framework, or explore the multi-timeframe workflow for execution.

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