ATR Filter Strategy FREE Download: Powerful (Yet Risky) Guide + 9 Practical Rules
Volatility can be your best friend—or the reason your account feels like it’s on a roller coaster. That’s exactly why traders love using an ATR filter. It’s not fancy for the sake of being fancy. It’s a simple “gatekeeper” that answers one key question before you enter any trade:
Is the market moving enough right now for my strategy to make sense?
This article gives you a complete, practical blueprint, plus a copy-paste “free download” style pack (rules card, checklist, and journaling template). Important note: this is educational, not financial advice—always test on a demo/simulator first and risk only what you can afford to lose.
What an ATR Filter Strategy Is (And Why Traders Use It)
An ATR filter strategy uses the Average True Range (ATR) indicator to decide when to trade and when to stay out. It doesn’t try to predict direction. Instead, it measures volatility—how much price tends to move.
When volatility is too low, many strategies struggle:
- Breakouts fail and snap back.
- Trends stall.
- Price chops around, triggering stop losses on both sides.
An ATR filter helps by saying:
✅ “I’ll only trade when volatility is healthy.”
❌ “I’ll skip trades when the market is sleepy and choppy.”
ATR in Plain English
Think of ATR as the market’s “daily stride length.” If ATR is high, price is taking big steps. If ATR is low, price is shuffling.
Why “Filters” Beat Random Trades
A strategy can be logically good but still lose money if it trades in the wrong conditions. Filters help you match a strategy to the environment it needs.
- Trend strategies often like moderate-to-high volatility
- Mean-reversion strategies may prefer stable ranges
- Breakout strategies usually need expanding volatility
How ATR Is Calculated (Simple, No Math Headache)
ATR is based on True Range, which accounts for:
- The day’s high to low range
- Gaps from the prior close (important for stocks)
Then ATR averages True Range over a set period—often 14.
True Range Explained
True Range tries to capture the real movement, including gaps. That’s why ATR is great for avoiding “false calm” in markets that gap overnight.
Choosing an ATR Length
- 7 ATR: more sensitive (faster changes)
- 14 ATR: classic balance
- 21 ATR: smoother (slower changes)
A good rule: the faster your trading timeframe, the more a shorter ATR might feel responsive—but it can also get noisy.
The Core Idea: Use Volatility to Decide When to Trade
Here’s the big concept:
Your entry signal might be decent, but your trade timing improves when you only take signals during favorable volatility conditions.
Volatility Regimes (Quiet vs Active Markets)
Markets flip between:
- Quiet regimes: tight candles, small ranges, fakeouts
- Active regimes: cleaner moves, follow-through, real momentum
ATR helps detect which regime you’re in.
Common Mistake: ATR = Trend
ATR does not mean bullish or bearish. High ATR can happen in both directions—big rallies or big selloffs.
ATR Filter Types You Can Use
Absolute ATR Threshold Filter
Rule example:
- Trade only if ATR(14) > 1.50 (for a stock where ATR is measured in dollars)
This can work, but it’s symbol-dependent. A $10 stock and a $500 stock don’t behave the same.
ATR Percent-of-Price Filter
This normalizes ATR:
- ATR% = ATR / Price
Example rule:
- Trade only if ATR% > 1%
This makes it easier to compare across assets.
ATR vs ATR Moving Average Filter
This is one of the cleanest “regime filters”:
- Trade only if ATR(14) > SMA(ATR(14), 50)
Meaning: current volatility is above its own longer-term “normal.”
ATR Band Break Filter
Another approach:
- Only trade when ATR breaks above a recent volatility range (expansion)
This is useful for breakout traders who want confirmation that energy is building.
A Step-by-Step ATR Filter Strategy Blueprint
Below is a complete blueprint you can test. Keep it simple. Simple is easier to improve.
Market Selection + Timeframe
Pick one lane first:
- Swing trading: 4H or Daily charts
- Intraday: 5m–30m charts (harder, faster, more noise)
Start with one market type (stocks or crypto or forex) so your testing is consistent.
Entry Logic (Trend + Confirmation)
Example entry framework (simple trend-following):
- Trend filter: Price above EMA(200) for longs, below for shorts
- Setup trigger: Pullback to EMA(20) then a bullish/bearish candle close
You can swap EMA for other trend tools, but don’t overcomplicate.
ATR Filter Condition (The Gatekeeper Rule)
Pick one:
- ATR% filter: ATR(14)/Close > 1%
- ATR regime: ATR(14) > SMA(ATR(14), 50)
This filter is the “bouncer at the club.” If volatility isn’t right, you don’t enter—even if the setup looks tempting.
Exit Logic (Profit + Protection)
Simple ATR-based exit:
- Stop loss: 2 × ATR(14) from entry
- Take profit: 3 × ATR(14) from entry
OR - Trail stop: 2 × ATR(14) behind price once it moves in your favor
The goal is consistency. You can optimize later.
Risk Management (The Part That Keeps You Alive)
Most traders lose not because their entry is “wrong,” but because:
- They risk too much
- They move stops emotionally
- They don’t cap drawdowns
ATR-Based Stop Loss
ATR stops adapt to volatility:
- In calm markets, your stop is smaller
- In wild markets, your stop is wider (so normal noise doesn’t kick you out)
Common starting points:
- 1.5×ATR (tighter)
- 2×ATR (balanced)
- 2.5×ATR (looser)
Position Size Using ATR
If your stop is based on ATR, position size should adjust too.
Simple model:
- Account risk per trade = 1% (or less)
- Stop distance = 2×ATR
- Position size = (Risk $) / (Stop distance)
That way, two trades in different volatility conditions still risk the same amount.
Max Daily/Weekly Loss Rules
These save you from revenge trading:
- Max daily loss: 2R–3R
- Max weekly loss: 6R–10R
(R = risk per trade)
When you hit the limit, you stop. No debate.
Backtesting the Strategy the Right Way
Backtesting is where strategies go to either become real—or get exposed.
What Metrics Matter
Track:
- Win rate
- Average win vs average loss
- Profit factor
- Max drawdown
- Number of trades (sample size matters)
A strategy with a tiny sample can look amazing by accident.
Walk-Forward + Out-of-Sample Testing
If you tweak rules until backtest looks perfect, that’s often curve fitting.
Safer process:
- Build rules
- Test on older data (in-sample)
- Validate on newer data you didn’t tune on (out-of-sample)
- Paper trade before real money
Best Settings to Start With (Safe Defaults)
These are “reasonable starting points,” not magic.
Starter ATR Length and Filter Thresholds
- ATR length: 14
- ATR% filter: 0.8% to 1.5% depending on market
- ATR regime filter: ATR(14) > SMA(ATR(14), 50)
Stop/Target Multipliers
- Stop: 2×ATR
- Target: 3×ATR
- Optional trail: 2×ATR after price moves +1×ATR
Common Pitfalls (And How to Fix Them)
Over-Filtering and Missing Trades
If your filter is too strict, you’ll barely trade—and you may miss the best trends.
Fix:
- Loosen thresholds slightly
- Or use regime filter instead of a hard ATR% value
News Spikes and Fake Volatility
Big events can inflate ATR temporarily, then volatility collapses.
Fix:
- Consider skipping trades during major scheduled news (especially forex)
- Add a “no-trade window” rule if needed
Changing Markets
What worked last year may degrade this year.
Fix:
- Retest quarterly
- Use broad, simple rules rather than ultra-optimized ones
Templates You Can Copy-Paste
Trading Checklist
- Trend condition met (define it)
- Setup trigger confirmed (define it)
- ATR filter passes (volatility acceptable)
- Stop calculated (ATR multiple)
- Position size calculated (risk capped)
- Entry/exit levels set before clicking buy/sell
- Journal fields ready to log
Trade Journal Columns
Use these columns in a spreadsheet:
- Date
- Symbol
- Timeframe
- Setup type
- ATR(14)
- ATR% (optional)
- Filter pass/fail
- Entry
- Stop
- Target
- Position size
- Result (R)
- Notes (emotion, mistakes, quality score)
ATR Filter Strategy FREE Download (Copy-Paste Pack)
Below is your “download-style” resource pack you can paste into Notes, Notion, or a doc.
Rules Card (One Page)
ATR FILTER STRATEGY — RULES CARD1) Trend Filter:
- Longs only if Close > EMA(200)
- Shorts only if Close < EMA(200)2) Setup Trigger:
- Pullback toward EMA(20)
- Enter on candle close back in trend direction3) ATR Filter (choose ONE):
A) ATR Regime: ATR(14) > SMA(ATR(14), 50)
B) ATR Percent: ATR(14) / Close > 1.0%4) Stop Loss:
- Stop = Entry - 2×ATR(14) (long)
- Stop = Entry + 2×ATR(14) (short)5) Take Profit:
- Target = Entry + 3×ATR(14) (long)
- Target = Entry - 3×ATR(14) (short)6) Risk Rules:
- Risk per trade <= 1% of account
- Max daily loss = 3R, then stop trading
Backtest Plan
BACKTEST PLAN (FAST BUT HONEST)1) Pick 1 market + 1 timeframe.
2) Use the same rules for at least 100 trades.
3) Record R-multiples (not just dollars).
4) Validate on a different time period (out-of-sample).
5) If you change rules, restart the test count.
6) Paper trade for 2–4 weeks before going live.
One relevant external link
Here’s a simple reference on ATR basics (for definitions and examples).
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/atr.asp
FAQs
1) Is ATR good for day trading?
Yes, ATR can be useful for day trading because it adapts stops and filters to the day’s volatility. The main challenge is noise—lower timeframes can produce many false signals. Using an ATR filter can reduce those “chop trades,” but you still need strict risk control.
2) What’s a good ATR setting for beginners?
A common starting point is ATR(14). It’s widely used and gives a balanced view of volatility. Beginners should avoid constantly changing ATR length because that often turns into over-optimizing.
3) Should I use ATR% or raw ATR values?
If you trade multiple symbols with very different prices, ATR% tends to be easier because it normalizes volatility. Raw ATR can work fine if you trade one asset consistently.
4) Can ATR tell me the direction of the next move?
No. ATR measures movement size, not direction. You still need a trend or entry method to determine long vs short bias.
5) Why does my strategy perform worse when ATR is low?
Low ATR often means tighter ranges, more chop, and less follow-through. Breakouts fail more often, and trend trades get stopped out by small reversals. That’s exactly what ATR filters try to avoid.
6) How do I stop “curve fitting” when optimizing ATR filters?
Use a simple rule, test on a large sample, and validate on data you didn’t optimize on (out-of-sample). If small tweaks dramatically change results, the strategy may be fragile.
7) Can I combine ATR with RSI or MACD?
You can, but keep the system simple. A common combo is:
- ATR filter to confirm volatility is healthy
- RSI/MACD to help time entries
Just be careful not to stack indicators until the strategy becomes confusing and hard to test.
Conclusion
An ATR filter strategy is a practical way to avoid trading in “bad weather.” It won’t magically make every system profitable, but it can dramatically improve discipline by keeping you out of low-volatility chop and helping you size risk more intelligently.
If you want, tell me your market (stocks/crypto/forex) and timeframe, and I’ll suggest a clean starter ATR filter setup that fits that environment—still strictly educational and test-first.