Liq. Heatmap & Levels
Combined liquidation heatmap with exact price levels — see both the density and the precise zones.
What is Liq. Heatmap & Levels?
Liq. Heatmap & Levels merges the visual density of the Liquidation Heatmap with precise price level data, giving you the complete picture of where liquidation pressure sits. While the standard Liquidation Heatmap shows color-coded density, this tool adds exact numerical levels so you know precisely where the highest-impact zones begin and end.
This combined view eliminates the guesswork. Instead of estimating where a bright zone starts on the heatmap, you get clear price levels marked on the chart. This is particularly valuable for setting targets, stop losses, and understanding exactly how far price needs to move to trigger specific liquidation clusters.
The tool provides both a macro view (the heatmap showing overall distribution) and a micro view (specific levels with estimated liquidation volume), making it suitable for both position planning and real-time trade management.
Key Concepts
- Liquidation Level: A specific price where a significant concentration of liquidation orders exists
- Level Density: The estimated volume of positions that would be liquidated at each specific level
- Zone Mapping: Broader price ranges that contain multiple individual liquidation levels
- Level Proximity: How close the current price is to the nearest significant liquidation level
How to Use Liq. Heatmap & Levels
- Open Liq. Heatmap & Levels from the sidebar under Liquidation Tools
- Select your trading pair
- The chart displays the heatmap overlay along with marked price levels
- Identify the nearest significant levels above and below current price
- Use the level data to understand the potential magnitude of a move if price reaches a cluster
What to Look For
- Bullish signals: Significant short liquidation levels nearby above current price represent targets that could accelerate an upward move if reached. Cleared long liquidation levels below (already swept) suggest the downside has been flushed.
- Bearish signals: Large long liquidation levels clustered just below current price represent risk — price only needs a small push down to trigger a cascade. Multiple levels stacked closely together amplify the cascade potential.
- Key patterns: Asymmetric level distribution is key. If there are far more liquidation levels on one side of price than the other, the market has a structural pull in that direction. Levels that survive multiple price approaches without being triggered indicate strong positioning.
- Combine with: Liquidation Heatmap for a cleaner density view, Liquidity Heatmap for order book support at those levels, Flow Chart for understanding if order flow supports a move toward key levels
Supported Exchanges
| Exchange | Status |
|---|---|
| Binance | ✅ |
Tips
- Use exact levels for setting take-profit and stop-loss orders — liquidation levels often act as magnets that price reaches before reversing
- Do not assume price will stop at the first liquidation level — cascades can blow through multiple levels in sequence
- Compare liquidation levels with traditional chart levels (support, resistance, Fibonacci) for the highest-confidence zones