Confirmation Techniques: Combining Signals Properly
How to make two indicators genuinely strengthen each other instead of just agreeing by accident.
In short: Proper confirmation means combining indicators that measure different things — trend, momentum, volatility and volume — so that when they agree the signal is genuinely stronger, rather than stacking redundant tools that only repeat the same information.
What confirmation is for
Confirmation is the practice of requiring a second, independent piece of evidence before acting on a signal. The goal is to filter out false signals: any single indicator fires often and is wrong often, but when two independent tools agree, the weaker of the two random false signals is filtered away. Done well, confirmation raises the quality of the trades you take at the cost of taking fewer of them — a trade-off most traders should welcome, since fewer, better trades usually beats more, worse ones.
The independence rule
The single most important rule is that confirming indicators must be independent — they must measure different dimensions of the market. Confirming RSI with Stochastic is nearly useless because both are momentum oscillators reading the same thing; they will almost always agree, adding no information. Confirming an RSI momentum signal with a moving-average trend reading, or with a volume spike, is genuine confirmation because those tools can and do disagree. Real confirmation only means something when the confirming tool could have said no.
The four dimensions to combine
A robust way to build confirmation is to draw from the four families that measure different things: trend (moving averages, ADX), momentum (RSI, MACD), volatility (Bollinger Bands, ATR) and volume (OBV, volume itself). A signal supported by two or three of these different families is far stronger than one supported by three momentum tools. For example, an RSI oversold turn (momentum), at a Bollinger Band lower edge (volatility), on rising volume (volume), is a genuinely triple-confirmed setup.
Price action as the primary confirmation
The most valuable confirmation is often price itself, not another indicator. A momentum divergence is only a warning; it becomes actionable when price confirms by breaking a swing level or printing a reversal pattern. Waiting for price to confirm an indicator signal — a break of structure, a close beyond a level — filters out many of the premature signals indicators are prone to. Indicators can suggest, but price action pulling the trigger keeps you from acting on hints that never materialise.
Sequencing: filter, signal, trigger
A clean way to organise confirmation is as a sequence rather than a vote. First a filter sets the context — for example, only take longs when the daily trend is up. Then a signal proposes a trade — RSI turns up from oversold. Then a trigger confirms the entry — price breaks the prior bar's high. Each stage must pass before the next matters. This filter-signal-trigger structure is cleaner than simply requiring several indicators to light up at once, because each element has a defined job.
Knowing when confirmation costs too much
Confirmation is not free. Every extra condition you require makes signals rarer and later, and past a point the delay costs more than the false signals it avoids. If a setup needs five things to align, it may almost never occur, or occur so late that the move is over. The art is balance: enough confirmation to filter obvious false signals, not so much that you are always last through the door. Two or three independent, well-chosen confirmations are usually the sweet spot.
Key takeaways
- Confirmation filters false signals by requiring independent agreement.
- Confirming indicators must measure different things, or they add no information.
- Draw from trend, momentum, volatility and volume for genuine independence.
- Price action is often the most valuable confirmation of an indicator signal.
- Too much confirmation makes signals rare and late — two or three is usually enough.
FAQ
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Published 5 May 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.