XRP Camarilla Pivot Points Today: Levels and Strategy

XRP Camarilla pivot points table showing R1-R4 resistance and S1-S4 support levels with ATR from CryptoFXRadar tool


Last updated: July 11, 2026 — levels calculated from the latest daily candle.

XRP is trading at $1.1161, sitting inside one of the most watched zones in the entire Camarilla system: above R3 ($1.1124) but below R4 ($1.1205). In Camarilla terms, this is the breakout watch zone — the area where a range-bound day either fails and snaps back toward the pivot, or turns into a genuine trend move.

Below you will find today's full XRP Camarilla pivot points, followed by a practical guide on how intraday traders and scalpers actually use these levels. If you only came for the numbers, the table is right here.

Today's XRP Camarilla Pivot Points

Calculated from the previous daily candle (High: $1.1177, Low: $1.0880, Close: $1.1042) using the standard Camarilla formula:

LevelTypePrice (USDT)Role in the system
R4Resistance1.1205Breakout level — above this, trend mode
R3Resistance1.1124Primary reversal zone for shorts
R2Resistance1.1096Minor resistance
R1Resistance1.1069Minor resistance
PPivot1.1033Mean — the magnet price gravitates to
S1Support1.1015Minor support
S2Support1.0988Minor support
S3Support1.0960Primary reversal zone for longs
S4Support1.0879Breakdown level — below this, trend mode

Reading today's board: with XRP at $1.1161, price has already cleared R1, R2, and R3. The bulls' job is to turn R3 into support and push through R4 at $1.1205 — only 0.4% away. Failure here typically sends price rotating back toward the pivot at $1.1033. The ATR(14) sits at $0.0440 (about 3.94% of price), so a full move from the current level to either R4 or the pivot is well within a normal day's range for XRP.

These levels shift with every new daily candle. Rather than recalculating eight formulas by hand each morning, you can pull them live — for XRP or any pair — from our free Resistance and Support Levels tool, which computes Camarilla, Classic, Woodie's, and Fibonacci pivots plus ATR from the latest candle automatically.

What makes Camarilla different from regular pivot points?

Camarilla pivot points were developed in 1989 by bond trader Nick Scott. The core idea is simple: on most days, price is mean-reverting — it oscillates around yesterday's close rather than trending all day.

The formula takes the previous day's high, low, and close and projects four resistance levels (R1 to R4) and four support levels (S1 to S4). Unlike Classic pivots, the Camarilla levels are tighter and hug the previous close, which is exactly why scalpers love them: they mark the precise spots where intraday mean reversion is most likely to kick in — and the spots where it is most likely to fail.

The hierarchy matters more than the individual numbers:

R3 and S3 — the reversal levels. These are the workhorses of the system. On a normal range day, price tags R3 and sells off, or tags S3 and bounces. Most Camarilla trades are taken here.

R4 and S4 — the breakout levels. When price pushes through R4 or breaks below S4, the mean-reversion assumption is officially dead for the day. The market is telling you it wants to trend, and fading it becomes the low-probability play.

R1, R2, S1, S2 — the noise zone. These minor levels matter mostly for very tight scalps and for watching how price behaves on its way to the big levels.

Why Camarilla works well on XRP specifically

Not every asset suits this system. Camarilla shines on instruments that are liquid and spend most of their time ranging — and XRP checks both boxes. It is consistently among the highest-volume pairs on Bybit and Binance futures, and outside of major news bursts, XRP is notorious for long sideways stretches where price grinds between well-defined levels.

That personality is exactly what a mean-reversion framework needs. On quiet days, the S3-to-R3 range acts like a corridor. And when XRP does break out, it tends to move hard — which is why respecting R4 and S4 as regime-change signals matters more on XRP than on slower assets.

Two practical ways traders use these levels

Strategy 1: The S3 / R3 reversal (range days)

This is the classic Camarilla play. If price drifts down to S3 ($1.0960 today) without any major news driving it, mean-reversion traders look for long entries targeting a rotation back toward the pivot, with a stop placed just below S4 ($1.0879). The mirror trade applies at R3 for shorts.

The logic of the stop placement is built into the system: if price reaches S4, the reversal thesis was wrong and a breakdown is likely underway, so there is no reason to keep holding against it. Today the gap between S3 and S4 is about 0.7% — a defined, known risk before the trade is ever placed.

Strategy 2: The R4 / S4 breakout (trend days)

When price closes an hourly candle beyond R4 or S4 on strong volume, the day has flipped from range mode to trend mode. Breakout traders enter in the direction of the break, often using the broken level itself as the stop reference. Today's setup makes this concrete: XRP is pressing against R4 at $1.1205, so a clean hourly close above it, backed by rising volume, is the trigger this strategy waits for.

The main enemy here is the false breakout — a quick poke above R4 that immediately collapses back into the range. Volume is the filter: a real breakout comes with expanding volume, while a fake one usually happens on thin activity. Checking momentum before committing helps too; our Coin Deep Dive tool aggregates RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands, and volume ratio for XRP into a single view, so you can see in seconds whether the indicators back the move or contradict it.

Common mistakes with Camarilla pivots

Fading a strong trend. R3 and S3 reversals work on range days. If BTC is dumping 4% and dragging the whole market, buying XRP at S3 just because the level exists is catching a falling knife. Always check the broader market first.

Trading through major news. CPI releases, FOMC decisions, and big regulatory headlines routinely blow straight through every pivot level as if they were not there. Camarilla assumes a normal, orderly session — news sessions are neither. We covered how violent these moves get in our crypto futures liquidation guide.

Using stale levels. Camarilla levels are only valid for the current daily candle. Trading yesterday's levels today is one of the most common — and most avoidable — errors. Automating the calculation removes it entirely.

Ignoring ATR. If the distance to your target is larger than the day's typical range, the trade probably will not get there today. With XRP's ATR at 3.94%, the full S3-to-R3 corridor (about 1.5%) is easily reachable — but always sanity-check targets against ATR before entering.

Get today's levels in one click

Every level in this article came straight from the CryptoFXRadar Resistance and Support Levels tool — no spreadsheets, no manual formulas, no copy-paste errors. It recalculates Camarilla, Classic, Woodie's, and Fibonacci pivots from the latest candle for any pair, alongside ATR(14) and the distance of each level from the live price. Bookmark it, and your morning prep drops from fifteen minutes to one.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Trading cryptocurrencies, especially with leverage, carries a high risk of loss.

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