Key price levels that show you where Bitcoin has room to move
Think of Bitcoin's price as a ball bouncing between a floor and a ceiling.
Support is the floor — a price level where buyers tend to step in and stop the price from falling further. When Bitcoin drops to a support level, demand usually picks up.
Resistance is the ceiling — a price level where sellers tend to take profits, making it harder for the price to keep rising.
These levels aren't magic numbers. They come from real market data — recent trading ranges, moving averages, and key round numbers that traders watch.
| Level | What It Means | How We Calculate It |
|---|---|---|
| Support | Where buyers tend to step in | Lower of the 24-hour low and the nearest round $5,000 level below the current price |
| Current Price | Where Bitcoin is trading right now | Live price from CoinGecko, updated every 5 minutes |
| Resistance | Where sellers tend to take profits | 24-hour high — or the 50-day moving average if it's above the current price |
The lowest price Bitcoin hit in the last 24 hours. If the price is near its daily low, it may be testing support — buyers recently stepped in at this level.
The nearest $5,000 level below the current price (like $65,000, $80,000, $85,000). Round numbers matter because traders place large buy orders at them. They act as psychological floors.
The average closing price over the last 200 days. This is one of the most important levels in all of investing — not just crypto. When Bitcoin is below its 200-day MA, it's considered undervalued by long-term standards. The further below, the deeper the value zone.
The highest price Bitcoin hit in the last 24 hours. If Bitcoin is near its daily high, it may struggle to push higher without a catalyst.
The average closing price over the last 50 days. When Bitcoin is below its 50-day MA, the short-term trend is bearish, and the 50-day MA acts as resistance overhead — the price has to fight through it to reverse the trend.
The highest price Bitcoin has ever reached. This is the ultimate resistance level. When Bitcoin approaches its ATH, some holders sell to lock in profits. When it breaks through, it often signals a new bull run.
The buy signal score tells you when conditions are favorable. The support and resistance levels tell you where you stand.
Here's a simple way to think about it:
| Situation | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Score is high + price near support | Strong entry — multiple signals agree and price is near a floor |
| Score is high + price near resistance | Good signal, limited upside — wait for a dip closer to support |
| Score is low + price near support | Watch closely — support may hold but indicators aren't aligned yet |
| Score is low + price near resistance | Wait — no signal and price has little room to run |
All support and resistance data on RocketDip is calculated from real market data — no predictions, no opinions.
Everything updates every 5 minutes alongside the buy signal score. You can verify the moving averages on TradingView.