Key Takeaways
- Daily Bias is a directional hypothesis, not a prediction — it tells you which side of the market to favor before the session opens.
- Higher timeframe context always overrules lower timeframe noise when forming a bias.
- Previous day’s high and low act as liquidity magnets that shape where price is likely to reach for or reject from.
- Time of day matters — certain sessions are built for manipulation, others for the real directional move.
- A wrong bias isn’t a failed system — it’s a signal to stand down, not to force a trade.
- Bias should filter your trades, not replace your entry model — it tells you direction, not timing.
Every trader has stared at a chart at 8 PM the night before, wondering which way price is going to go tomorrow. Most guess. Some flip a mental coin based on how the last candle looked. A small minority actually build a structured opinion — and that opinion has a name in ICT terminology: Daily Bias.
Daily Bias isn’t a magic prediction tool. It’s a framework for walking into the trading day already knowing which side of the market you’re looking to trade from, so you’re not reacting to every candle like it’s new information.
What Daily Bias Actually Means
Daily Bias is the directional lean a trader forms before a session begins, based on higher timeframe structure, unresolved liquidity, and recent price behavior. It answers one question: “If I had to pick a side today, which side would it be?”
This is fundamentally different from watching a 1-minute chart and reacting candle by candle. Bias is formed top-down — from the weekly and daily chart down to the session you intend to trade — not bottom-up from noise.
“A trader without a bias is a passenger. A trader with a bias is at least holding the map — even if the road still has turns.”
Why Higher Timeframe Context Comes First
The single biggest mistake new traders make when forming a bias is starting on the lower timeframes. A 5-minute chart will show you ten different “biases” in a single hour — none of them meaningful. The weekly and daily charts show you where the actual battle is happening: is price in a discount relative to a recent range, or in a premium? Is there a draw on liquidity above or below current price that hasn’t been reached yet?
Once that higher timeframe context is clear, everything on the lower timeframe becomes supporting evidence, not the source of the decision. This links directly to the concept of liquidity and market structure, which forms the backbone of how ICT traders read direction in the first place.
The Role of Previous Day’s High and Low
One of the most reliable reference points for forming a bias is the previous day’s high and low. These levels aren’t arbitrary — they represent the most recent extremes where resting orders accumulated. Price frequently returns to these levels either to sweep them for liquidity before reversing, or to break through them and continue.
A simple but effective bias-forming question: did yesterday close near its high or its low? A close near the high often suggests the market wants to test that level again before deciding on direction. A close near the low suggests the opposite. This isn’t a rule that works 100% of the time — nothing in trading does — but it’s a far better starting point than guessing.
Reading Bias Through the Lens of Inducement
A bias formed in isolation is dangerous if you ignore how smart money engineers the first move of the day to trap retail traders. Often the opening move is designed purely to trigger stop losses and pull in breakout traders before the real move begins in the opposite direction. This is exactly why understanding inducement in ICT trading matters when forming a bias — your bias should account for the likelihood of an early fake-out before the true direction shows itself.
Session Timing and Bias Confirmation
Not every hour of the trading day carries equal weight. Certain windows are historically associated with manipulation — price moving in a way that looks directional but is really just clearing out liquidity. Other windows are associated with the “real” expansion move that actually respects the higher timeframe bias.
This is where a bias gets tested, not formed. If your bias says price should move higher today, and the early session sweeps a low before reversing up, that’s not a failure of your bias — that’s often confirmation of it. If instead price breaks structure cleanly against your bias with strong momentum, that’s your cue to reassess rather than force the original idea.
Comparison: Weak Bias-Forming Habits vs Structured Bias-Forming Habits
| Element | Weak Approach | Structured ICT Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Starting Point | Lower timeframe candle patterns | Weekly/daily structure and liquidity |
| Reference Levels | Round numbers, gut feeling | Previous day high/low, unmitigated levels |
| Reaction to Early Move | Flips bias instantly | Expects possible inducement first |
| Session Awareness | Trades any time, any move | Filters entries by session behavior |
| Handling a Wrong Bias | Forces trades to be “right” | Stands aside and reassesses |
What Nobody Tells You
Here’s the part most educators skip: your Daily Bias will be wrong a meaningful percentage of the time, and that’s not a flaw in the method — it’s the nature of forecasting anything in an open system like the market. The traders who actually profit from bias aren’t the ones who are right more often than everyone else. They’re the ones who built a habit of recognizing when the big move has already confirmed and acting on it, versus the ones who cling to a bias out of ego after the market has clearly shown them something different.
Bias is a lens, not a leash. The moment it stops matching what price is actually doing, the discipline is to let it go — not to argue with the chart.

Building a Repeatable Bias-Forming Routine
A useful routine doesn’t need to be complicated. Before each session, review the weekly chart for the broader directional context, then the daily chart for the most recent structure shift, then mark the previous day’s high and low. Ask where the unresolved liquidity sits — above or below current price — because markets have a strong tendency to move toward the side where liquidity hasn’t yet been taken.
From there, write down one sentence: “I expect price to move toward X because of Y.” That single sentence becomes your filter for the day. Any trade that aligns with it gets consideration. Any setup that fights it gets a much higher bar of proof before you take it.

Why Bias Alone Doesn’t Make You a Profitable Trader
Bias tells you direction. It says nothing about entry precision, risk management, or when to actually pull the trigger. Traders who treat bias as a complete system rather than one input tend to force trades the moment their bias is confirmed, even without a clean setup. Combining bias with structural concepts like breaker blocks or mitigation blocks gives you both the “which way” and the “from where” — direction paired with a defined entry.
Bias without an entry model is an opinion. An entry model without bias is directionless precision. Neither one alone is a trading strategy — they’re two halves of the same decision.
“Direction without precision gets you into the right move late. Precision without direction gets you into the wrong move perfectly.”
Common Bias-Forming Mistakes
The most common error is forming a new bias every few hours based on whatever the lower timeframe is doing in the moment. This turns a structured framework into constant guessing dressed up in ICT vocabulary. A real daily bias should hold for the session unless higher timeframe structure itself breaks — not because one candle disagreed with you.
The second common error is ignoring order blocks and fair value gaps entirely and trading bias as a standalone signal. These tools exist precisely to give your bias a landing zone — a specific area where the trade idea and the entry model meet.
The third, and most damaging, is refusing to walk away when the day clearly isn’t respecting your read. This is closely tied to broader lessons around building trader discipline over a full year of development, where learning to sit on your hands is often the hardest skill to build.

Now It’s Your Move
- Start top-down. Before your next session, look at the weekly and daily chart first — not the 5-minute chart.
- Mark the previous day’s high and low and note which one price closed nearer to.
- Identify unresolved liquidity above or below current price to see which side the market may be drawn toward.
- Write your bias in one sentence before the session opens — commit to it on paper or in a notes app.
- Expect an early inducement move and don’t abandon your bias the instant price dips against it.
- Pair your bias with a defined entry model instead of trading the bias as a signal on its own.
- Review at day’s end whether your bias held, and if not, why — this is where real skill compounds over time.