Intro
VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) is one of the most useful tools for intraday traders.
It shows:
the average price traded, adjusted for volume
Unlike simple averages, VWAP reflects where the majority of trading activity actually occurred.
What VWAP Tells You
VWAP answers a simple question:
“Where did most of the volume trade today?”
This makes it useful for identifying:
- fair value
- trend direction
- potential entry zones
How VWAP Works
VWAP combines:
- price
- volume
Into one line.
It:
- updates throughout the session
- resets daily
This makes it ideal for intraday trading
Why VWAP Matters
Fair Value
- Price above VWAP → strong / bullish
- Price below VWAP → weak / bearish
Institutional Behaviour
Large traders aim to:
- buy below VWAP
- sell above VWAP
This creates repeatable behaviour around the level
Trend Confirmation
- Holding above VWAP → uptrend
- Holding below VWAP → downtrend
How to Use VWAP
1. Buy & Sell Zones
Buy idea
- Price below VWAP
- Starts moving back up
- Shows strength
Sell idea
- Price above VWAP
- Starts rejecting
- Shows weakness
2. Dynamic Support & Resistance
VWAP often acts as:
- support in uptrends
- resistance in downtrends
3. Breakouts
- Break above VWAP + strong volume → bullish
- Break below VWAP + strong volume → bearish
4. Mean Reversion
Price often returns to VWAP.
This creates:
- scalp opportunities
- pullback entries
Example
If VWAP is at 100:
- Price at 98 → below value → potential long
- Price at 102 → above value → potential short
Best Practices
- Use VWAP for intraday only
- Combine with:
- structure
- volume
- momentum
- Wait for confirmation
- Don’t trade blindly off the line
Common Mistakes
- Treating VWAP as a signal on its own
- Ignoring volume
- Overtrading around it
Limitations
- VWAP is lagging
- Resets daily
- Not suitable for swing trading
Final Thoughts
VWAP is not a standalone strategy.
It’s a tool that helps you:
understand where value is
Used properly, it can:
- improve entries
- confirm direction
- add structure to your trading
Bottom Line
Trade around value—not emotion.

