How to Use ADX to Measure Trend Strength
Use ADX and directional lines to distinguish strong trends from weak or ranging markets.
The Average Directional Index measures trend strength regardless of direction. It can prevent a trend strategy from trading when the market lacks expansion.
ADX and Directional Movement
A rising ADX suggests strengthening directional movement, while a falling ADX suggests weakening trend conditions. Thresholds such as 20 or 25 are guidelines that require instrument-specific testing.
The positive and negative directional lines provide directional context. Price structure should confirm their message.
Strategy Filtering
Trend-following systems can require ADX to rise above a threshold before entry. Range systems may prefer low or falling ADX.
ADX is lagging because it summarizes recent movement. Use it as a regime filter rather than an exact trigger.
Practical Checklist
- Separate strength from direction.
- Test thresholds by market.
- Use structure for the actual entry.