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What is Turtle Soup (Failed Breakout)?

Reviewed by TradingEdgeIC Licensed · Funded Pro Trader
Definition

A trade that fades a false breakout — entering against the direction of the apparent break once it fails to follow through.

Also called:turtle soupfailed breakoutfakeout
range highrange low1① false breakout2② closes back inside range3Turtle Soup / failed breakout: price pierces the range, fails to follow through, closes back inside → fade.
Original diagram · © TradingEdge · Free to share with attribution

The Turtle Soup concept

Originally a name from Linda Bradford Raschke's work in the 1990s, "Turtle Soup" describes the setup where a market breaks out of a range (triggering breakout traders) but then fails immediately and reverses. The breakout traders are trapped and forced out, fueling the reverse move.

In ICT/SMC language, this is equivalent to a "sweep and reclaim" or "liquidity grab and reversal" — same setup, different lineage. The mechanics: aggressive participants spike price past an obvious range high/low, harvest the liquidity from breakout traders + stops, then push price back inside the range or beyond.

Setup criteria

(1) An established range or consolidation with clear high and low. (2) Price breaks out (often during low-liquidity hours or on weak volume). (3) The breakout closes back inside the range — this is the failure confirmation. (4) Lower-timeframe reversal signal (structure shift, engulfing candle). (5) Enter against the failed breakout direction with stop just past the breakout extreme.

The earlier you can identify the failure (close back inside the range), the better your risk-reward. Wait too long and you're chasing.

Risk of Turtle Soup

Not every failed breakout reverses cleanly. Sometimes price breaks out, fails, reverses inside the range, then breaks the OTHER side and continues that direction. Or it chops the range repeatedly without giving a clean reversal trade.

Manage risk by: (a) limiting trade frequency — don't take every "almost failure", (b) using tight stops past the breakout extreme, (c) taking partial profit at the range midpoint and trailing stop on remaining position, (d) recognizing market regime — turtle soup works in range markets, fails in trending markets where breakouts continue.

Common mistakes to avoid
  • Entering before the close back inside the range — too early
  • Wide stop past the extreme — defeats the high-RR purpose
  • Trading turtle soup in trending markets — breakouts often continue
  • Missing the trade because of waiting too long for "perfect" confirmation

Related ICT concepts

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