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How I Use Order Blocks and FVG Together Without Overcomplicating It
After a certain point, using just one concept in trading doesn’t feel enough.
You learn about order blocks, you learn about FVGs… they both make sense on their own. But the real difference starts when you see how they work together.
That’s when things begin to feel less random.
At first, I was treating them separately. I would mark an order block and expect a reaction. Or I would see an FVG and wait for price to come back. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t.
It felt inconsistent.
Over time, I realized the problem wasn’t the concepts. It was how I was using them.
An order block, on its own, is just an area where price previously showed strong interest. It’s where the market made a decision and moved aggressively. But that doesn’t mean price will always respect it perfectly when it comes back.
Same with FVG. It shows imbalance. It shows that price moved too fast and might return. But again, not every gap leads to a clean reaction.
The real shift happened when I stopped looking at them as separate tools and started looking for moments where they overlap.
Because when they do, the story becomes clearer.
What I look for now is pretty simple. I wait for a strong move in the market. Something clean, something obvious. Not a messy, choppy move, but a clear push in one direction. That move usually leaves two things behind: an order block and an FVG.
The order block shows where the move started.
The FVG shows how aggressively it moved.
And when price comes back, it often doesn’t just randomly react anywhere. It tends to react around those areas.
Sometimes price taps the FVG first and then reaches deeper into the order block. Sometimes it respects the edge of the gap and moves away. Sometimes it goes straight into the order block and ignores the gap completely.
That’s why I don’t treat them as exact entry points.
I treat them as a zone of interest.
The mistake I used to make was trying to be too precise. I wanted the perfect entry, the exact level, the clean reaction every time. But the market doesn’t always give that.
Now I focus more on behavior.
When price comes back into that area, I watch how it reacts. Does it slow down? Does it reject? Does it sweep liquidity first and then move? Or does it just slice through everything like it’s not even there?
Those small details matter more than the zone itself.
Another thing I noticed is that the best setups usually don’t happen in isolation. If price takes liquidity first, then moves into an FVG that sits inside or near an order block, the reaction tends to be much cleaner.
It’s like everything lines up.
You have a reason for price to go there, and a reason for it to react.
That’s very different from just randomly marking zones and hoping for the best.
I’m also a lot more selective now. I don’t mark every order block. I don’t care about every FVG. Clean structure, strong moves, and clear areas — that’s what I focus on.
Less noise, better decisions.
At some point, you stop thinking in terms of “strategy” and start thinking in terms of context. Where is price coming from? What did it do before? Why would it come back here?
When those questions start making sense, the charts feel different.
You’re not guessing anymore.
You’re just waiting for price to return to places that already proved they matter.
And that changes everything.
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