A peak, a pullback. A higher peak, a pullback to nearly the same level. A third peak that can't reach the second one's height. Three bumps that, taken together, are the most famous reversal shape in all of charting.
The earliest technical analysts, working from hand-drawn bar charts in the early 1900s, named this shape for what it plainly looked like — a head between two shoulders.
Robert Edwards and John Magee's landmark technical analysis text formalized the neckline, the confirmation rule, and the measuring technique that still define this pattern today.
Modern pattern-recognition software flags candidate head-and-shoulders shapes across thousands of tickers — most of which never confirm, a fact the software rarely emphasizes.
Because it's the most widely taught chart pattern, traders now see it in nearly every three-peak wiggle — most of which never earn the confirmation.
After an uptrend: a peak and pullback (left shoulder), a higher peak and a pullback to near the same level (the head), then a third peak that fails to reach the head's height (right shoulder).
Connect the two troughs on either side of the head — that's the neckline. The pattern isn't confirmed until price closes clearly below it after the right shoulder forms.
Measure the vertical distance from the head's peak down to the neckline, then project that same distance downward from the point where the neckline breaks — a rough, widely-cited price target.
The 2007–2008 topping process is widely described in financial commentary as resembling a broad head and shoulders — a useful, if debated, illustration of the shape at major-index scale.
Around the 2021 cycle top, shorter-timeframe charts show clearer three-peak structures with confirmed neckline breaks — a more textbook scale for this pattern than major index tops.
Because real head-and-shoulders shapes are messier and more debated than textbook diagrams, this lesson leans on the clean schematic to teach the rule, and treats real examples as illustrations, not proof.
A clean left shoulder, a higher head, and a right shoulder now forming near the left shoulder's height — but price hasn't touched the neckline yet. What should you do?
Price closes clearly below the neckline after the right shoulder forms. Two sessions later, it recovers back above the neckline and keeps climbing. What happened?
Three uneven peaks print — the second is only slightly higher than the first, and the third is much taller than both, with no clear symmetry. Is this a head and shoulders?
Three swings, watched as they build on the left — and the mark they leave in the ledger on the right. A confirmed break, a failed break — and three peaks that were never really a pattern.
Three swings and a neckline. Judge the shape and whether the close cleared it — then call it: short (confirmed), pass, or watch (unconfirmed).
The classic error is front-running the shape — shorting as soon as the right shoulder starts forming. The discipline is mechanical: draw the neckline, wait for a confirmed close beyond it, and place a stop above the right shoulder in case the break fails.
Head and shoulders earned its fame honestly — three peaks, a neckline, a measured move — but that same fame means every trader now sees it everywhere. Draw the neckline. Wait for the close. Let the break do the talking.
The trend is your friend — until it bends.