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What Is a Candlestick Chart? Beginner Guide With OHLC Examples

Published: ·Updated: ·By Iven W.

A candlestick chart is the most widely used chart type in trading. Every candle on the screen encodes four price points for a given time period: Open, High, Low, and Close — collectively called OHLC.

If you can read a single candle, you can read any chart. This guide covers exactly that: what each part of a candlestick means, how OHLC data maps to the visual, and how to start practicing today.

No patterns. No jargon. Just the basics — because that's all you need before moving on to reading candlestick patterns.

Candlestick Structure: The OHLC Diagram

Every candlestick has three visual parts: an upper wick, a body, and a lower wick. Here's what they represent:

     │              ◄── Upper wick = High
     │
  ───┤───           ◄── Top of body = Close (green) or Open (red)
  │  │  │
  │  │  │           ◄── Body = range between Open and Close
  │  │  │
  ───┤───           ◄── Bottom of body = Open (green) or Close (red)
     │
     │              ◄── Lower wick = Low

How to read it:

  • Bullish candle (green): Close is above Open. The body runs from Open (bottom) to Close (top). Buyers won this period.
  • Bearish candle (red): Close is below Open. The body runs from Close (bottom) to Open (top). Sellers won this period.
  • Upper wick: Extends from the top of the body to the High — the highest price reached.
  • Lower wick: Extends from the bottom of the body to the Low — the lowest price reached.

A candle with no wicks means the Open or Close was also the High or Low. A candle with a very small body (where Open and Close are nearly equal) is called a Doji — it signals indecision.

Practice with ChartMini

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OHLC Example: Reading a Real Candle

Let's say you're looking at a daily chart and see a green candle with these values:

Data PointValueWhat It Means
Open$100The stock started the day at $100
High$108During the day, price reached $108
Low$97At some point, price dropped to $97
Close$105The stock finished the day at $105

Here's the story this candle tells:

  1. Price opened at $100 and initially sold off to $97 (lower wick).
  2. Buyers stepped in aggressively, pushing price all the way up to $108 (upper wick).
  3. Some selling occurred into the close, settling at $105 (top of body).
  4. Net result: bullish day — price gained $5 (Close $105 − Open $100).

The body height ($100 to $105) shows the net move. The wicks ($97 to $108) show the intraday range — a $11 swing that the body alone would hide.

Candlestick vs. Line Chart

Beginners often start with line charts because they look simpler. But line charts discard most of the information.

FeatureLine ChartCandlestick Chart
Data per periodClose onlyOpen, High, Low, Close
Shows intrabar rangeNoYes (wicks)
Shows open-close gapNoYes (body)
Shows buyer/seller battleNoYes (body + wick size)
Best forSpotting overall trend directionAnalyzing price action and entries
ComplexityVery simpleSlightly more to learn, far more insight

A line chart is fine for answering "is the market going up or down overall?" But when you need to decide where to enter or exit a trade, candlesticks give you the detail a line chart can't.

5 Common Beginner Mistakes

1. Ignoring the Wicks

Wicks are not decoration. A long upper wick on a green candle means price pushed high but got rejected — sellers were active near the top. If you only look at the body, you miss this signal.

2. Reading a Single Candle in Isolation

One candle tells you what happened in one period. It becomes meaningful only in context — what came before, where it sits relative to support/resistance levels, and what the overall trend is doing.

3. Confusing "Time" with "Importance"

On a daily chart, each candle = 1 day. On a 5-minute chart, each candle = 5 minutes. A large red candle on a 5-minute chart might be insignificant on the daily. Always know your timeframe.

4. Memorizing Patterns Before Understanding OHLC

Many beginners jump straight to memorizing pattern names (Hammer, Engulfing, Doji) before they can fluently read a single candle's OHLC data. This is backwards. If you can't glance at a candle and instantly name Open, High, Low, Close, pattern recognition will feel like guesswork.

5. Treating Every Candle as a Signal

Not every candle is actionable. Some are noise. A candlestick is a data point, not a trading signal by itself. Signals come from combinations of candles, volume, and context — which is covered in the candlestick patterns guide.

5-Minute Practice Routine in ChartMini

Reading about candlesticks is like reading about riding a bike. You have to do it. Here's a structured 5-minute routine you can repeat daily:

Minute 1: Open ChartMini and Load a Chart

Go to ChartMini Bar Replay and pick any stock. Set the chart to daily candles.

Minute 2–3: Read Candles Aloud

Step through the chart one candle at a time. For each candle, say out loud:

  • "Open was [price], Close was [price]"
  • "High reached [price], Low touched [price]"
  • "This was a bullish/bearish day because..."
  • "The wicks tell me..."

This feels slow at first. After 20–30 candles, you'll stop translating and start reading directly.

Minute 4: Tell the Story

Pick any 5-candle sequence and describe what happened as a narrative:

"Day 1: strong buying pushed price from $50 to $55. Day 2: buying continued to $58. Day 3: a big upper wick appeared — buyers pushed to $62 but sellers rejected it, closing at $57. Day 4: selling intensified, closing at $52. Day 5: selling continued to $49."

Minute 5: Rate Yourself

Could you read each candle fluently? Did you catch the wick signals? Track your progress — most people can read candles instinctively after 5–7 sessions.

What Comes After the Basics?

Once you can read OHLC data fluently on any candle, the next step is learning to spot patterns — specific arrangements of candles that signal potential reversals or continuations.

That's a separate skill, and it's covered in the candlestick patterns guide, which walks through 12 essential patterns with visual examples.

The key sequence is:

  1. This guide → Understand OHLC and single-candle structure
  2. Patterns guide → Learn multi-candle patterns and what they signal
  3. ChartMini practice → Apply both on real historical data, risk-free

Frequently Asked Questions

What does OHLC stand for in trading?

OHLC stands for Open, High, Low, Close — the four price data points that each candlestick displays. Open is the starting price of the period, High is the highest price reached, Low is the lowest price, and Close is the final price when the period ends.

How is a candlestick chart different from a line chart?

A line chart connects closing prices with a single line. A candlestick chart shows four data points per period (Open, High, Low, Close) using colored bars with wicks, revealing the intrabar battle between buyers and sellers that a line chart hides.

What do the colors of a candlestick mean?

A green (or white) candle means the Close is above the Open — price went up during that period. A red (or black) candle means the Close is below the Open — price went down.

What are wicks (shadows) on a candlestick?

Wicks are the thin lines extending above and below the candle body. The upper wick shows the highest price reached during the period. The lower wick shows the lowest price. Long wicks indicate rejection at those price levels.

Can beginners use candlestick charts?

Yes. Candlestick charts are the standard starting point for learning technical analysis. Begin by understanding a single candle's OHLC data, then practice reading series of candles on a simulator like ChartMini before studying specific patterns.

How do I practice reading candlestick charts?

Use a bar replay tool like ChartMini to scroll through historical charts candle by candle. For a structured beginner routine, follow this bar replay candle-by-candle practice guide: name the OHLC values, describe what happened, predict the next candle, reveal it, and write one mistake. Practice 5 minutes daily — within a week you'll read candles more systematically.

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IW

Iven W.

Founder of ChartMini, MBA, and active trader since 2007 with nearly two decades of experience in forex and equity markets. Built ChartMini to help traders practice chart reading and replay-based trading skills.