Support & Resistance — Live Pivot Point Levels

Search any NSE stock to see its Classic, Fibonacci and Camarilla pivot points — the pivot, three resistance and three support levels — for daily, weekly and monthly timeframes, with a price chart and company profile.

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What are pivot points?

Pivot points are pre-calculated support and resistance levels derived from the previous period’s high, low and close. The central Pivot (PP) is the average of those three prices; from it, resistance levels (R1, R2, R3) project above and support levels (S1, S2, S3) project below. They give traders a map of likely turning points before the session even opens.

Reading each level

LevelRoleHow traders use it
R3 / R2 / R1Resistance (above price)Potential ceilings where a rally may stall or reverse; targets for longs, entries for shorts.
Pivot (PP)The equilibrium levelTrading above PP leans bullish for the session; below PP leans bearish.
S1 / S2 / S3Support (below price)Potential floors where a fall may pause or bounce; targets for shorts, entries for longs.

Three methods, three flavours

Classic pivots use simple averages; Fibonacci pivots space the levels by Fibonacci ratios; Camarilla pivots cluster tighter to the close for intraday mean-reversion. Compare all three on this page.

How pivots are used

Intraday bias: above the pivot is bullish for the day, below it is bearish — a fast context for day trading.
Entries & exits: traders buy near support and sell near resistance, or trade breakouts through R1/S1.
Stop placement: the next pivot level is a logical place for a stop-loss.
Timeframes: daily pivots suit intraday, weekly and monthly pivots suit swing and positional trades.

Pivots are zones, not exact prices

Treat each level as a zone of interest rather than a precise line. Confirm reactions with volume, RSI and market depth before trading a bounce or breakout.

Frequently Asked Questions

Support is a price zone where buying tends to appear and stop a fall; resistance is a zone where selling tends to appear and cap a rally. Pivot points calculate these zones mathematically from the prior period’s high, low and close — R1–R3 above and S1–S3 below the central pivot.

The central pivot (PP) is the average of the previous period’s high, low and close. Resistance and support levels are then projected from PP and the high-low range. Classic, Fibonacci and Camarilla methods use different formulas — this page shows all three.

Classic pivots use straightforward averages of the prior range. Fibonacci pivots place the support/resistance levels at Fibonacci ratios (38.2%, 61.8%, 100%) of the range. Camarilla pivots cluster the levels closer to the close and are popular for intraday mean-reversion trading.

Match the timeframe to your trade: daily pivots for intraday trading, weekly pivots for swing trades over a few days, and monthly pivots for positional trades. This page lets you switch between all three.

Pivots are a widely used, self-fulfilling map of likely turning points because many traders watch the same levels. They work best as zones combined with other confirmation (volume, RSI, market depth), not as guaranteed reversal prices.

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