How to Use RSI in Trading — The Complete Guide
RSI is the most popular momentum oscillator in the world. But most traders use it wrong. Here is how to actually use it.
What Is RSI?
RSI (Relative Strength Index) was developed by J. Welles Wilder in 1978. It measures the speed and magnitude of price changes on a scale of 0 to 100. The standard setting is 14 periods.
The formula compares average gains to average losses over the lookback period: RSI = 100 - (100 / (1 + RS)) where RS = Average Gain / Average Loss.
RSI Strategy #1: Overbought/Oversold (The Classic)
RSI > 70 = overbought. RSI < 30 = oversold. Simple, but there is a catch.
In strong trends, RSI can stay overbought for WEEKS while price keeps climbing. Shorting just because RSI hit 70 is a recipe for getting run over.
Pro tip: Only fade overbought/oversold signals when price is at a known support/resistance level AND there is divergence confirmation. Never trade RSI levels in isolation.
RSI Strategy #2: Divergence (The Real Edge)
Divergence is the strongest RSI signal. It happens when price and RSI disagree about momentum:
- Bearish divergence: Price makes a higher high, but RSI makes a LOWER high. Momentum is weakening. Sell signal.
- Bullish divergence: Price makes a lower low, but RSI makes a HIGHER low. Momentum is building. Buy signal.
- Hidden divergence: Price makes a lower high but RSI makes a higher high (bullish continuation). Or price makes a higher low but RSI makes a lower low (bearish continuation). Hidden divergence confirms the trend is still intact.
Best practice: Regular divergence = reversal signal. Hidden divergence = continuation signal. Mark S/R levels first, then look for divergence at those levels. A divergence at a key level is 3x more reliable than one in no-man's-land.
RSI Strategy #3: Failure Swings
A failure swing is when RSI crosses into overbought/oversold territory, pulls back, then tests the extreme again but fails to cross it:
- Top failure swing: RSI hits 75, drops to 60, rallies back to 72 (fails to make new high). Sell.
- Bottom failure swing: RSI hits 25, rallies to 40, drops back to 28 (fails to make new low). Buy.
RSI Strategy #4: The 50-Line Crossover
RSI crossing above 50 = bullish momentum taking control. Crossing below 50 = bearish momentum. Simple but effective for trend following. Combine with a moving average crossover for confirmation. When both RSI > 50 AND price > 50 EMA, the trend is your friend.
RSI Strategy #5: Range-Bound RSI (2-Period)
Larry Connors popularized the 2-period RSI for mean-reversion trading in range-bound markets. Buy when 2-period RSI < 10. Sell when > 90. Only use this in choppy/sideways markets (ADX < 20). In trending markets, this strategy will destroy you.
Common RSI Mistakes
- Treating 70/30 as absolute lines. In a strong uptrend, RSI 50-80 is normal. In a downtrend, 20-50 is normal. The "overbought" zone shifts with the trend.
- Using RSI alone. Always combine with trend analysis (moving averages, ADX) and price action (S/R levels, candlestick patterns).
- Ignoring timeframe context. RSI on a 5-min chart means something very different from RSI on a daily chart.
- Not waiting for confirmation. Divergence can persist for weeks before price reverses. Wait for a candlestick confirmation before entering.