Bollinger Bands Calculator
Bollinger Bands Calculator
Calculate upper, middle, and lower Bollinger Bands from your price data. Enter a series of prices, set the period and standard deviation multiplier to instantly see band values, bandwidth, and %B to gauge volatility and identify potential overbought or oversold conditions.
Price Data
Bollinger Bands
INSTRUCTIONS
How to Use This Calculator
1. Enter Price Data
Paste or type a comma-separated list of closing prices. You need at least as many data points as your chosen period length.
2. Set the Period
Choose the lookback period for the SMA and standard deviation. The default is 20 periods, which is the most common setting.
3. Set Multiplier
Set the standard deviation multiplier. The default of 2 captures about 95% of price action. Increase for wider bands or decrease for tighter bands.
4. Interpret Results
Review the three bands, bandwidth for volatility, and %B to see where price sits within the bands. Values near 0% or 100% suggest extremes.
EDUCATION
Understanding Bollinger Bands
Bollinger Bands are a volatility indicator developed by John Bollinger in the 1980s. They consist of three lines: a middle band that is a simple moving average (SMA), an upper band at a specified number of standard deviations above the SMA, and a lower band at the same number of standard deviations below. The bands automatically widen when volatility increases and narrow when it decreases.
The formulas are: Middle Band = SMA(n), Upper Band = SMA(n) + k x StdDev(n), and Lower Band = SMA(n) - k x StdDev(n), where n is the period and k is the multiplier (typically 2). Two derived metrics are also useful: Bandwidth = (Upper - Lower) / Middle x 100 measures overall volatility, while %B = (Price - Lower) / (Upper - Lower) x 100 shows where price sits relative to the bands.
Traders use Bollinger Bands in several ways. A Bollinger Squeeze occurs when bandwidth narrows to a low level, often preceding a significant price move. Prices touching or exceeding the upper band may indicate overbought conditions, while prices at or below the lower band may suggest oversold conditions. However, in strong trends, prices can ride along a band for extended periods. Combining Bollinger Bands with other indicators like RSI helps confirm signals and improve trading decisions.
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