What Are Premium and Discount Zones?
Premium and discount zones are a core ICT concept used to determine where, within a defined price range, an entry actually belongs. The idea is simple to state but powerful in practice: a price range is split into two halves by its midpoint, called equilibrium. The upper half is the premium zone — where price is considered relatively expensive. The lower half is the discount zone — where price is considered relatively cheap.
The core trading principle that follows is equally simple. You want to buy when price is in the discount zone, and you want to sell when price is in the premium zone. This single rule — buy below 50%, sell above 50% — is what ICT calls Premium and Discount, and it forms part of the broader PD Array (Premium and Discount Array) framework that organises where every other ICT entry tool (order blocks, Fair Value Gaps, liquidity sweeps) should ideally be applied.
Imagine you want to buy a car with a fair market value of $120,000. Anything you pay above $120,000 is a premium price. Anything below $120,000 is a discounted price. Naturally, you would always prefer to buy at a discount, not at a premium.
Premium and discount zones project this exact same intuition onto a price chart using Fibonacci. The equilibrium level represents the “fair value” of the current range. To buy, you want to be in the discount zone, below fair value. To sell, you want to be in the premium zone, above fair value.
How to Identify Premium and Discount Zones
Identifying these zones requires nothing more than the standard Fibonacci retracement tool, anchored correctly to a relevant swing high and swing low.
- Identify the most recent significant swing Look at the latest established impulse leg — typically following a clear Break of Structure (BOS) — on your chosen analysis timeframe, often the daily or 4-hour chart.
- Apply the Fibonacci retracement tool Draw from the established swing high to the established swing low, or vice versa, depending on the prevailing trend direction (covered in detail below).
- Mark the 50% level as equilibrium This single line is the only level that truly matters for this concept — it separates premium from discount.
- Shade or label the two halves Everything above the 50% line is premium. Everything below the 50% line is discount. Many ICT-style indicators automate this shading directly on the chart.
- Re-mark the zones after every new Break of Structure Premium and discount zones are not static. Each time price breaks structure and establishes a fresh swing high or low, you draw a new Fibonacci range and re-identify the current premium and discount zones from that new range.
Diagram 1: A defined price range split by the 50% equilibrium line. The upper half (premium) is favourable for selling. The lower half (discount) is favourable for buying. Price oscillating between the two zones offers repeatable entry opportunities on each side.
How to Mark the Zones in a Bullish Trend (Discount)
When the market structure shows a clear uptrend, you draw the Fibonacci retracement tool from the recent swing low to the swing high, following a confirmed Break of Structure. The discount zone — the lower half, below 50% — becomes your area of interest for buy setups.
Identifying a Fresh Discount Zone
When price breaks the previous high and makes a new higher high (confirming the uptrend), redraw your Fibonacci from the fresh swing low to the fresh swing high. The new lower half of this updated range is your current discount zone for the next buy entry.
Why Discount Matters in an Uptrend
Buyers who entered earlier in the uptrend are looking to add to existing long positions at a better, cheaper price. New buyers want to enter without chasing price at the top of the range. Both groups naturally gravitate toward the discount zone, creating genuine demand there.
How to Mark the Zones in a Bearish Trend (Premium)
When the market structure shows a clear downtrend, you draw the Fibonacci retracement tool from the recent swing high to the swing low, following a confirmed Break of Structure. The premium zone — the upper half, above 50% — becomes your area of interest for sell setups.
Identifying a Fresh Premium Zone
When price breaks the previous low and makes a new lower low (confirming the downtrend), redraw your Fibonacci from the fresh swing high to the fresh swing low. The new upper half of this updated range is your current premium zone for the next sell entry.
Why Premium Matters in a Downtrend
Institutions that initiated short positions at higher levels are taking profit as price retraces back up toward the premium zone — and often see this retracement as an opportunity to re-enter or add to their existing short positions at an improved price.
Diagram 2: Left — in an uptrend, the discount zone (below equilibrium) is where buyers re-enter on the pullback before continuation. Right — in a downtrend, the premium zone (above equilibrium) is where sellers re-enter on the bounce before continuation.
Premium and Discount as Part of the PD Array
Premium and discount zones rarely operate as a standalone signal in ICT methodology. Instead, they form the structural skeleton of the broader PD Array (Premium and Discount Array) — a framework that organises where every other ICT entry tool should ideally be applied.
The practical rule is simple: bullish PD arrays (order blocks, Fair Value Gaps, breaker blocks) should ideally be found within the discount zone during an uptrend. Bearish PD arrays should ideally be found within the premium zone during a downtrend. When multiple bullish PD array tools cluster together inside the discount zone, that confluence creates a significantly higher-probability buy setup than any single tool used alone.
| Concept | Role in PD Array | Where to Look |
|---|---|---|
| Order Block | Institutional accumulation/distribution footprint | Discount (bullish) or premium (bearish) |
| Fair Value Gap | Price imbalance the market is drawn back to fill | Discount (bullish) or premium (bearish) |
| Breaker Block | A failed level that flips role after invalidation | Discount (bullish) or premium (bearish) |
| Liquidity Sweep | Stop hunt that often precedes the real move | Often occurs at the zone’s extremes |
How OTE Relates to Premium and Discount
Readers familiar with our dedicated guide on the ICT Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) will recognise the underlying logic immediately — OTE is, in essence, a more refined and narrowed version of premium and discount theory. Where premium and discount divide a range into two broad halves at the 50% line, OTE narrows the entry zone further still, to the specific 62%–79% band within whichever half (premium or discount) is relevant to your trade direction.
In practice, many ICT traders use premium and discount as the broader filter — confirming which half of the range a setup should ideally form within — and then use OTE’s tighter 62%–79% zone as the more precise entry trigger inside that broader half.
Best Markets and Timeframes
Premium and discount zones work in any market where price is delivered live on a chart — the underlying Fibonacci-based logic is not tied to any specific asset class. The concept was originally developed using US index futures (NASDAQ and S&P 500) but has since proven highly effective across forex majors, gold, and crypto.
| Timeframe | Role |
|---|---|
| Daily / 4H | Identify overall market trend and the current relevant premium/discount range |
| 15-Minute / 5-Minute | Locate precise PD array entry tools (order blocks, FVGs) within the identified zone |
Common Mistakes Traders Make With Premium and Discount
- Buying in premium or selling in discount This is the single most common and costly error — entering against the core logic of the concept entirely, chasing price at an expensive level rather than waiting for a discount, or selling cheap rather than waiting for a premium.
- Using a stale Fibonacci range after structure has broken Failing to redraw the zones following a new Break of Structure means trading off an outdated range that no longer reflects current institutional positioning.
- Treating premium and discount as a standalone signal Entering purely because price has crossed the 50% line, without any other PD array confluence or lower timeframe confirmation, produces a low-quality, unconfirmed entry.
- Ignoring the higher timeframe trend entirely Marking a discount zone and buying it during a confirmed daily downtrend fights the dominant order flow and significantly reduces the probability of success.
- Drawing the Fibonacci tool on an insignificant, minor swing A premium/discount range anchored to a weak, low-conviction swing produces zones with little genuine institutional significance.
- Confusing equilibrium with a hard reversal guarantee Price crossing the 50% line does not guarantee an immediate reversal — it simply identifies which half of the range currently favours which direction of trade, requiring further confirmation before entry.
Pre-Trade Checklist for Premium and Discount Setups
- Higher timeframe (daily/4H) trend direction clearly confirmed
- Fibonacci range drawn from the most recent, genuinely significant swing
- Zone re-marked following the most recent confirmed Break of Structure
- Price is in the discount zone (uptrend) or premium zone (downtrend) — correct alignment
- A PD array tool (order block or FVG) is present within the relevant zone
- Lower timeframe market structure shift confirms the entry direction
- Entry, stop loss, and take profit defined before entering the trade
- Risk-to-reward ratio is at least 2:1, with target toward the opposite zone or liquidity
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts
Premium and discount zones translate one of the most intuitive ideas in all of trading — buy cheap, sell expensive — into a precise, repeatable framework using nothing more than a Fibonacci retracement tool and a single 50% line. That simplicity is exactly what makes it such a powerful organising principle underneath the rest of the ICT methodology.
The concept earns its real value not as a standalone signal, but as the structural map that tells you where to look for every other tool in your toolkit — order blocks, Fair Value Gaps, and liquidity sweeps all carry significantly more weight when they appear in the correct half of the range relative to your directional bias. Master this single discipline — never buy in premium, never sell in discount — and the rest of your ICT analysis gains a far clearer sense of place.
Continue building this framework with our guides on ICT Optimal Trade Entry (OTE), ICT Order Blocks, Fair Value Gap (FVG) Trading Strategy, and Liquidity Sweeps Explained.
