| Level | Price | Distance | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
0.0% | 1.1500 | 0.0000 | HIGH |
23.6% | 1.1382 | 0.0118 | SUPPORT |
38.2% | 1.1309 | 0.0191 | SUPPORT |
50.0% | 1.1250 | 0.0250 | SUPPORT |
61.8%★ | 1.1191 | 0.0309 | SUPPORT |
78.6% | 1.1107 | 0.0393 | SUPPORT |
100.0% | 1.1000 | 0.0500 | LOW |
Retracement: Price = High − (High − Low) × Ratio. These levels show where price may find support as it pulls back within an uptrend.
Start Tracking Your Trades in LORDDARK →How to Use the Fibonacci Calculator
This free Fibonacci calculator works for any market including forex, stocks, crypto, and indices. Follow these steps to get your retracement and extension levels in seconds.
Select your market. Choose Forex, Stocks, Crypto, or Indices. This sets the correct decimal precision automatically so your levels are accurate.
Enter your swing high and swing low. Look at your chart and identify the most recent significant peak and trough. Enter both prices into the calculator.
Choose the trend direction. Select Uptrend if price has been moving up, or Downtrend if price has been moving down. This tells the calculator whether your levels act as support or resistance.
Read your Fibonacci levels. The table shows every key level with the exact price, the distance from your swing point, and whether it acts as support, resistance, or a profit target.
Fibonacci Retracement vs Extension Levels
Fibonacci retracement and extension levels are both calculated from the same swing high and low, but they serve different purposes in a trade plan.
Retracement Levels
Retracement levels measure how far price has pulled back from a swing high or low. The key retracement levels are 23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, and 78.6%. Traders use these levels to find potential entry points when price pulls back before continuing its trend.
Extension Levels
Extension levels project where price could move beyond the original swing high or low. The most commonly used extension levels are 127.2%, 161.8%, and 261.8%. Traders use these as profit targets after price breaks past the original swing point.
Which Fibonacci Levels Matter Most?
Not all Fibonacci levels carry equal weight. Here are the key retracement levels from 0% to 100% and what each one means for your trades:
0% (Starting Point). This is your swing high in an uptrend or swing low in a downtrend. It marks where the move began and serves as your reference point for all other levels.
23.6% (Shallow Pullback). A minor retracement that usually happens in strong, fast-moving trends. If price only pulls back to this level and bounces, it signals strong momentum in the original direction.
38.2% (Moderate Pullback). One of the most watched retracement levels. In healthy trends, price often pulls back to 38.2% before continuing. This is a common entry level for traders looking to join an existing trend.
50% (Halfway Point). While 50% is not a true Fibonacci number, it is one of the most widely used levels in trading. Price pulling back to the midpoint of a move is a natural area for support or resistance. Many institutional traders watch this level closely.
61.8% (The Golden Ratio). The single most important Fibonacci level. Derived from the golden ratio (1.618), this level is where the strongest price reactions typically happen. If price holds at 61.8%, the trend is likely to continue. If it breaks through, the trend may be weakening.
78.6% (Deep Retracement). A deep pullback that signals the trend is under pressure. Price reaching this level means the move has given back most of its gains. This is often the last line of defense before a full reversal to 100%.
100% (Full Retracement). Price has returned all the way to where the original move started. At this point, the entire swing has been erased. This can signal a trend reversal or a move into a new range.
Most traders focus on the 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8% levels for trade entries. The 61.8% golden ratio level tends to produce the strongest reactions across forex, stocks, crypto, and indices.