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Been diving into Elliott Wave patterns lately, and I think more traders should understand regular flats better. This three-wave correction is honestly one of the most underrated setups if you know how to spot it.
So here's the thing about a regular flat: it's basically when price consolidates in a predictable way before continuing the main trend. Wave A starts the move down (or up), wave B bounces back and retraces almost all of it—usually 90% or more—and then wave C finishes slightly beyond where wave A ended. That small overshoot is actually key. It's not dramatic, but it's significant.
The structure matters. Wave A and C tend to be pretty aggressive, either zigzags or impulses, while wave B just sits there as a corrective pattern. That's what makes a regular flat different from other flat variations. An expanded flat would see wave B breaking past the start of wave A, which changes everything. A running flat doesn't even let wave C reach the end of wave A. But with a regular flat, you get that textbook slight overshoot.
What I find useful is that after a regular flat completes, the market usually just continues whatever the bigger trend was. It's like the market was catching its breath. These patterns show up all the time in sideways markets or when there's genuine indecision. That's why identifying them matters—it tells you consolidation is ending.
For trading, that slight overshoot of wave C gives you a solid entry point. The market proved it could break past the previous level, so there's momentum there. Just make sure you're actually seeing a three-wave structure and that wave B retraced most of wave A. Common mistake is confusing a regular flat with a zigzag correction, which has a completely different setup.
The key is looking for that clear three-wave pattern and confirming wave B's retracement. Once you nail down what a regular flat actually looks like versus other corrections, it becomes a pretty reliable tool for timing entries in the direction of the main trend.