Donchian Channel
The highest high and lowest low of the last N bars — the original breakout channel.
Quick answer: The Donchian Channel plots the highest high and lowest low over a look-back period as upper and lower bands, with their midpoint between them, so a push to a new N-period extreme is a breakout signal.
In simple words
The Donchian Channel is the simplest volatility channel of all: the upper band is just the highest high of the last 20 bars, the lower band is the lowest low, and the middle is the average of the two. When price pushes above the upper band it has made a new 20-bar high — a breakout — and when it drops below the lower band it has made a new 20-bar low. The channel widens when the market is volatile and swinging, and narrows when it is quiet. It is the backbone of classic trend-following and the famous Turtle Traders' system.
Donchian Channel — visual
How Donchian Channel looks on a chart
Upper band = highest high of the last N bars, lower band = lowest low, middle = their average. A step to a new extreme flags a breakout; the channel widens with volatility.
Professional explanation
A channel of price extremes
Unlike Bollinger Bands or Keltner Channels, the Donchian Channel is not built from averages or deviations — it simply tracks the highest high and lowest low over N bars. The bands therefore move in flat steps and only change when a new extreme is set. This makes the signal brutally objective: a close above the upper band means, by definition, a new N-period high has been made. There is no smoothing, no lag beyond the look-back itself, and nothing to interpret.
The original trend-following breakout
Richard Donchian, often called the father of trend-following, pioneered systematic rules around these channels in the mid-20th century. The idea is pure breakout logic: new highs beget higher highs. Buy when price makes a new N-bar high, sell/short when it makes a new N-bar low, and let the trend run. The legendary Turtle Traders of the 1980s used a Donchian-style system — a 20-day breakout for entries and a 10-day breakout in the opposite direction for exits.
Volatility read: width and steps
Though it is a breakout tool, the channel also reads volatility. A wide channel means the market has been swinging over a large range; a narrow channel means it has been coiling quietly. A long, flat upper band shows price has not made a new high for many bars — a range — and the first step up in that band marks the moment the range breaks. The narrowing of the channel is Donchian's version of a squeeze.
The midline and exits
The middle band — the average of the highest high and lowest low — acts as a mean and a trailing reference. In many systems a return to the midline signals a loss of momentum and an exit. Using a shorter look-back for the exit channel than the entry channel (e.g. enter on a 20-bar breakout, exit on a 10-bar breakout against you) tightens risk while still giving the trend room, the core of the Turtle exit logic.
Formula
Donchian Channel formula
Upper = Highest High over N; Lower = Lowest Low over N; Middle = (Upper + Lower) / 2
Default N is 20. Some platforms exclude the current bar from the high/low so a breakout is measured against prior bars only.
- Upper Band — The highest high over the look-back period N
- Lower Band — The lowest low over the look-back period N
- Middle Band — The average of the upper and lower bands — a mean/trailing reference
- N — Look-back period, default 20 bars
How it is calculated
- Choose a look-back period N (default 20).
- Set the upper band to the highest high of the last N bars.
- Set the lower band to the lowest low of the last N bars.
- Compute the middle band as (upper + lower) / 2.
- A close above the upper band is a new-high breakout; below the lower band, a new-low breakdown; the channel width shows volatility.
Interpretation & signals
Traders read the Donchian Channel for breakouts (a new N-bar high or low), for volatility (channel width — wide when swinging, narrow when coiling), and for exits/mean reversion at the middle band.
Buy / bullish signals
- Breakout long: price closes above the upper band, making a new N-bar high — the classic trend-following entry.
- Turtle-style entry: a 20-day high breakout to go long, letting the new trend run.
- After a narrow (coiled) channel, the first decisive step up in the upper band marks a volatility-expansion breakout.
- Price holds above a rising middle band, confirming the up-breakout has follow-through.
Sell / bearish signals
- Breakdown short: price closes below the lower band, making a new N-bar low.
- Turtle-style exit: a long is closed when price makes a 10-day low against it (shorter exit channel).
- A break below a flat, long-standing lower band signals a range has broken to the downside.
- A fall back below the middle band warns the up-breakout has failed — a cue to exit longs.
False signals to beware
- In a sideways market, breakouts beyond the bands often fail immediately — the dreaded false breakout that reverses back into the range.
- Because the bands only step on new extremes, they lag inside a fresh reversal until a new extreme forms.
- A very short look-back produces constant new highs and lows, most of which are noise.
Settings, timeframe & conditions
Advantages & limitations
Advantages
- Utterly objective — a breakout is a new N-bar extreme, no interpretation needed.
- The foundation of proven trend-following systems, including the Turtles.
- No smoothing lag beyond the look-back; the signal is immediate on a new extreme.
- Also frames support/resistance and volatility via the band levels and width.
Limitations & disadvantages
- Prone to false breakouts in ranges — its biggest weakness.
- Bands only update on new extremes, so they lag inside a reversal.
- Non-directional as a channel; the breakout rule supplies direction but needs a trending market.
- Can enter late, after a chunk of the move has already occurred by the time a new extreme prints.
Combining Donchian Channel with other indicators
- Average Directional Index — ADX filters Donchian breakouts to trending regimes — take breakouts only when ADX is rising above 20–25 to avoid range false breaks.
- Average True Range — ATR sizes the stop and confirms the breakout has energy; a Donchian breakout on expanding ATR is more likely to hold.
- Supertrend — Supertrend gives a trailing directional stop to ride the trend that a Donchian breakout kicks off, managing the exit the channel does not.
Practical examples (Nifty & Bank Nifty)
NIFTY example
Nifty has been range-bound between 24,000 and 24,400 for a month, so the Donchian upper band sits flat at 24,400. When Nifty closes above 24,400 it prints a new 20-day high — a Donchian breakout — and a trend-follower goes long on the range break, using the middle band or a 10-day low as the trailing exit. The flat band that had capped price for weeks stepping up is the objective signal the range has resolved higher.
BANKNIFTY example
Bank Nifty makes a fresh 20-day low as it breaks below a long-standing lower band at 49,500. A Turtle-style trader shorts the breakdown and manages the trade with a 10-day high as the exit. Because Bank Nifty trends hard when it moves, the breakout often leads to an extended run; but in a choppy phase the same trader knows to stand aside, since Bank Nifty's false breakouts can be vicious.
Common mistakes
- Trading Donchian breakouts in a range, where they whipsaw as false breaks.
- Using too short a look-back, which manufactures constant meaningless new extremes.
- Forgetting to pair an entry channel with a shorter exit channel, so winners give back too much.
- Chasing a breakout far above the band instead of acting near the new extreme or waiting for a retest.
Professional usage
Professional trend-followers use Donchian Channels as an objective breakout engine, almost always inside a rules-based system: enter on a longer-period breakout (e.g. 20 or 55 bars), exit on a shorter-period breakout against the position (e.g. 10 or 20 bars), and size with ATR-based risk. A trend-strength filter such as ADX keeps them out of range-bound whipsaws. The channel supplies the trigger and the risk structure; the discipline of the system supplies the edge.
Key takeaway
The Donchian Channel tracks the highest high and lowest low of the last N bars, turning a new extreme into an objective breakout signal. It is the original trend-following tool — powerful in real trends, whipsaw-prone in ranges — so filter breakouts for a trending market and manage exits with a shorter channel.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Donchian Channel?
Who invented the Donchian Channel?
What are the best Donchian Channel settings?
How do you trade the Donchian Channel?
What is the Turtle Trading system?
How is the Donchian Channel different from Bollinger Bands?
What does the middle Donchian band mean?
Why do Donchian breakouts fail?
Does the Donchian Channel measure volatility?
Is the Donchian Channel good for intraday trading?
Can the Donchian Channel be used on Nifty and Bank Nifty?
Does the Donchian Channel show direction?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Donchian Channel.
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Why do Donchian breakouts get faked out?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 8 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.