Relative Strength Index RSI
The 0–100 momentum gauge that flags overbought and oversold conditions.
Quick answer: The RSI is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and size of recent price changes on a 0–100 scale, flagging a market as overbought above 70 and oversold below 30.
In simple words
RSI compares how much a stock or index has risen on its up days versus how much it has fallen on its down days over the last 14 bars, then squeezes that into a single number between 0 and 100. A high RSI (above 70) means buyers have been in strong control and the move may be stretched; a low RSI (below 30) means sellers have dominated and the fall may be overdone. Most traders use it to spot when a market is running too hot or too cold, and to catch momentum divergences before price turns.
Relative Strength Index — visual
How Relative Strength Index looks on a chart
RSI oscillates between 0 and 100. Readings above 70 mark overbought conditions, below 30 oversold; the 50 line separates bullish from bearish momentum.
Professional explanation
What RSI actually measures
RSI is the ratio of average gains to average losses over a look-back period, normalised onto a 0–100 scale. It does not measure the strength of one stock against another — despite the name — but the strength of a market against its own recent history. A rising RSI says up-moves are getting larger relative to down-moves; a falling RSI says the opposite. Because it reacts to the most recent bars, it can turn before price does, which is why it is classed as a leading indicator.
The 70/30 levels and the 50 midline
Wilder's original overbought/oversold thresholds are 70 and 30. But these are not automatic sell/buy signals: in a strong Nifty uptrend RSI can sit above 70 for days, and in a sharp fall it can stay pinned below 30. The 50 line is just as useful — momentum is broadly bullish above 50 and bearish below it, so many trend traders use a 50 cross as a filter rather than trading the 70/30 extremes blindly.
Divergence: RSI's most valued signal
The signal professionals prize most is divergence. Bearish divergence is when price makes a higher high but RSI makes a lower high — the new price peak is not backed by stronger momentum, warning of exhaustion. Bullish divergence is the mirror image at a bottom. Divergence is a warning, not a trigger: it can persist for a long time in a strong trend, so it works best combined with a price-based confirmation.
Why the period matters
The default is 14 periods. A shorter period (7–9) makes RSI more sensitive and noisier — more signals, more false ones — suited to intraday scalping. A longer period (21) smooths it, giving fewer but more reliable readings for positional trading. Changing the period changes how often RSI reaches 70/30, so the thresholds and the setting must be tuned together.
Formula
Relative Strength Index formula
RSI = 100 − 100 / (1 + RS), RS = Average Gain / Average Loss
Averages use Wilder's smoothing over N periods (default 14). Average Gain is the mean of up-closes, Average Loss the mean of down-closes.
- RS — Relative Strength — average gain divided by average loss over N periods
- Average Gain — Wilder-smoothed mean of the positive close-to-close changes
- Average Loss — Wilder-smoothed mean of the negative close-to-close changes (as a positive number)
- N — Look-back period, default 14 bars
How it is calculated
- For each bar, find the change from the previous close; separate it into a gain (if up) or a loss (if down).
- Compute the first Average Gain and Average Loss as simple averages over the first N periods.
- For every later bar, smooth: Average Gain = (prior Average Gain × (N−1) + current gain) / N, and the same for loss.
- Compute RS = Average Gain / Average Loss.
- Compute RSI = 100 − 100 / (1 + RS). The result is bounded between 0 and 100.
Interpretation & signals
Traders watch three things: whether RSI is above 70 (overbought) or below 30 (oversold), whether it is above or below the 50 midline (momentum bias), and whether it diverges from price (early reversal warning).
Buy / bullish signals
- RSI crosses back up through 30 from oversold, signalling selling may be exhausted.
- Bullish divergence: price makes a lower low but RSI makes a higher low.
- In an uptrend, RSI pulls back to the 40–50 zone and turns up (a trend-continuation entry).
- RSI crosses above 50, confirming momentum has flipped bullish.
Sell / bearish signals
- RSI crosses back down through 70 from overbought.
- Bearish divergence: price makes a higher high but RSI makes a lower high.
- In a downtrend, RSI rallies to 50–60 and rolls over.
- RSI crosses below 50, confirming momentum has flipped bearish.
False signals to beware
- Overbought in a strong trend: RSI can hold above 70 for many bars while price keeps rising — shorting it is a classic trap.
- Divergence in a powerful trend can repeat several times before price finally turns.
- On very short periods, 70/30 crosses fire constantly and most are noise.
Settings, timeframe & conditions
Advantages & limitations
Advantages
- Bounded 0–100 scale makes overbought/oversold easy to read and compare across instruments.
- Divergence gives an early warning that trend-following tools miss.
- Works on any timeframe and any liquid instrument.
- Simple, widely understood, and available on every charting platform.
Limitations & disadvantages
- Gives premature and repeated signals in strong trends.
- Overbought/oversold thresholds are arbitrary and instrument-dependent.
- As a single-line oscillator it ignores volume and the broader context.
- Whipsaws badly on short settings in choppy markets.
Combining Relative Strength Index with other indicators
- Exponential Moving Average — Use a 50/200 EMA to define the trend, then take only the RSI signals that align with it — RSI dips in an uptrend, RSI rallies in a downtrend.
- Moving Average Convergence Divergence — MACD confirms the momentum shift RSI hints at; agreement between the two is a stronger signal than either alone.
- Bollinger Bands — RSI extremes that coincide with a tag of the outer Bollinger Band mark high-probability mean-reversion points.
Practical examples (Nifty & Bank Nifty)
NIFTY example
Nifty rallies from 23,800 to 24,600 and RSI(14) pushes to 78 — overbought. A patient trader does not short the strength; instead they wait. Two days later Nifty prints a marginally higher high at 24,650 but RSI only reaches 71 — a bearish divergence. That combination of an overbought reading plus a failure to confirm the new high is the warning; a break of the prior swing low then confirms the pullback.
BANKNIFTY example
Bank Nifty sells off from 52,000 to 50,200 and RSI(14) drops to 24 — oversold. Rather than catching the falling knife, a trader waits for RSI to climb back above 30 while price holds above the previous session's low. That RSI recovery through 30, confirmed by price, is the cue that selling pressure has eased — Bank Nifty's higher volatility means its RSI reaches extremes faster than Nifty's.
Common mistakes
- Treating 'overbought' as an automatic sell — in a trend it is a sign of strength, not weakness.
- Acting on divergence alone without waiting for price to confirm.
- Using the 14-period default on a 1-minute chart and drowning in false signals.
- Forgetting that RSI thresholds should shift: 80/40 suits strong uptrends better than 70/30.
Professional usage
Institutional and professional traders rarely trade RSI's 70/30 crosses mechanically. They use RSI as a momentum context tool: to grade the strength of a trend (does each new high come with a higher RSI peak?), to time entries within an established trend using the 40–60 zone, and above all to hunt divergence at potential turning points. It is almost always combined with trend and price-structure analysis, never used as a standalone trigger.
Key takeaway
RSI is the market's momentum thermometer: above 70 it is running hot, below 30 it is running cold, and when it disagrees with price (divergence) it is warning of a turn. Read it in the context of the trend — in a strong move, respect the extreme; in a range, fade it.
Frequently asked questions
What is the RSI indicator?
What is a good RSI setting?
Is RSI a leading or lagging indicator?
What does RSI above 70 mean?
What does RSI below 30 mean?
What is RSI divergence?
What is the 50 line on RSI?
Which is better, RSI or MACD?
What is the best RSI setting for intraday trading?
Can RSI be used for Nifty and Bank Nifty?
Why does RSI stay overbought in an uptrend?
Does RSI repaint?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Relative Strength Index.
What is RSI in simple words?
Is RSI 30 a buy signal?
What RSI level is best to buy?
Is a high RSI good or bad?
How do I use RSI for day trading?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 8 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.