What order blocks and FVGs actually are — the prop firm version

Every ICT guide on the internet explains what order blocks and fair value gaps are in the abstract. This section is different: it explains what they are in the context of a prop firm account, where your stop loss placement, position size, and entry timing all interact with a trailing drawdown floor that you cannot afford to ignore.

The prop firm reframe: On a retail account you can draw down 20% and recover. On a funded account, a $2,500 trailing drawdown on a $50K account means your effective risk window is 5% of the account balance — forever, until the safety net locks. Every OB and FVG entry decision has to be made against that $2,500 buffer, not the $50,000 account size. This reframe changes everything about position sizing, stop placement, and setup selectivity.
Source: Phidias Prop Firm ICT guide (Aug 2025)
Order Blocks — the prop firm application
ICT Concept 01
Order Block (OB)
Definition: The last opposing-color candle before a significant impulsive move that causes a Break of Structure (BOS) or Change of Character (CHOCH). A bearish OB is the last green candle before a sharp move down. A bullish OB is the last red candle before a sharp move up. The OB marks where institutional orders were placed and where price is likely to retrace and find further institutional participation.
What makes a valid OB
  • Opposing candle directly preceding the impulsive displacement
  • Displacement causes a clear BOS on the current timeframe
  • Fair Value Gap created inside the displacement leg
  • OB has not yet been "mitigated" (price returned and closed through it)
  • Higher timeframe structure supports the directional bias
  • Located in a premium (for shorts) or discount (for longs) zone
What disqualifies an OB
  • No FVG in the displacement leg — move lacked institutional conviction
  • OB already mitigated — institutional orders absorbed, zone spent
  • Against the higher timeframe structure bias
  • Inside a consolidation range rather than at the origin of a trend
  • Located in a "fair" price zone (50% of larger range)
  • Multiple prior tests without clean rejection
Prop firm timing risk: The OB is not the entry — it is the zone. On intraday trailing accounts, entering at the top of the OB zone while price is still discovering its low means an adverse move immediately raises your floor. Wait for a confirmation candle (M5 or M15 rejection of the OB zone) before entering. The difference between entering at the OB high and entering on the confirmation is typically 3–6 ticks — worth every tick in floor preservation.
The OB in context — what the candle structure looks like
Order block structure — bullish example (price action schematic)
Price action (reading left to right, each row = one candle, bar represents price range):
Higher-TF downtrend
Prior downswing establishes bearish structure
→ The OB candle
← Last red candle before the bullish displacement
Displacement begins
BOS candle — FVG forms between this and prior candle
BOS confirms
Break of prior swing high = structure confirmed
Retrace to OB
Price retraces back to the OB zone — entry window
OB holds, continues
Institutions defend the OB — target = prior BOS high
Fair Value Gaps — quality vs quantity on funded accounts
ICT Concept 02
Fair Value Gap (FVG) / Imbalance
Definition: A three-candle pattern where the middle candle creates a gap between the wick of the first candle and the wick of the third candle. In a bullish FVG, the low of the third candle is above the high of the first candle. In a bearish FVG, the high of the third candle is below the low of the first candle. FVGs represent price areas where institutional orders were placed so aggressively that normal two-sided trading didn't occur. Price tends to return and "fill" the imbalance.
High-quality FVG signals
  • Forms inside a displacement leg from an OB origin
  • Middle candle body is large relative to surrounding candles
  • Gap has not been partially filled on subsequent candles
  • Aligns with the HTF premium/discount zone
  • Forms during a killzone (London or NY AM)
  • HTF structure supports the directional bias
FVG disqualifiers
  • Forms during Asian session or NY Lunch (low institutional conviction)
  • Middle candle represents <50% of the three-candle range
  • Partially filled already — zone compromised
  • No OB at the origin of the displacement that created it
  • Against the daily or 4H structure bias
  • Price has already made multiple visits without rejection
Prop firm FVG fill entries: The FVG fill is often cleaner than the OB entry for prop traders because the stop placement is more precise. A bullish FVG fill entry places the stop below the low of the first candle in the three-candle pattern — a defined, specific level rather than the OB zone which has width. Tighter stops with the same target = better R:R = more efficient use of drawdown buffer per trade.
FVG quality tiers for prop firm traders

Not all FVGs deserve position risk. On a funded account with a fixed buffer, a Grade C FVG that fails consumes the same drawdown as a Grade A FVG that succeeds — but the Grade C provides far less statistical edge per dollar risked. Grade your setups before sizing them.

A
Grade A — Full position
  • OB origin on H1 or H4
  • FVG forms in London or NY AM killzone
  • HTF daily and 4H structure aligned
  • Premium/discount zone confirmed
  • Clean liquidity sweep before the FVG
  • No partial fills on the gap
B
Grade B — Half position
  • OB origin but only on M15
  • Forms in London Close (lower conviction)
  • HTF structure aligned but not confirmed
  • Premium/discount zone marginal
  • Some partial fill already present
C
Grade C — Skip it
  • No OB at the origin
  • Forms during NY Lunch or Asian session
  • Against HTF structure
  • Inside a consolidation range
  • Multiple prior visits
  • At "fair" price, not premium/discount
OB + FVG confluence — the highest-probability prop firm setup

The single most consistent setup in the ICT model for prop firm traders is the OB + FVG confluence: an order block that contains a fair value gap within its displacement leg, with price returning to fill both simultaneously. This stacking of two institutional reference points in the same price zone creates significantly higher probability than either concept alone.

ATG confluence rule: The OB establishes the zone. The FVG within it establishes the precision entry. On a $50K account with a $2,500 buffer, entering at the FVG (not the OB top) means your stop is 2–4 ticks tighter. At 2 contracts on ES, a 4-tick stop difference = $100 in reduced risk per trade. Compounded across 20 trades per month, that is $2,000 in preserved buffer — nearly one full drawdown amount — from entry discipline alone.

When an order block aligns with a fair value gap, you have identified a zone where multiple institutional concepts converge. Market structure analysis provides the broader context — trading FVGs in the direction of the overall market structure bias increases win rate and helps avoid counter-trend trades that can quickly violate prop firm risk parameters.

The three-layer confluence checklist:
1. Higher timeframe (Daily/4H) structure: bias confirmed in this direction
2. OB on H1 or H4: displacement candle with BOS and FVG inside the leg
3. FVG entry: price returning to the gap during a killzone (London or NY AM)

All three present = Grade A setup, full position. Two of three = Grade B, half position. One = Grade C, skip.
How drawdown type changes OB and FVG risk

This is the section most ICT guides don't have — because they're written for retail traders without a trailing drawdown floor. The same OB entry has completely different risk characteristics on an EOD vs intraday trailing account.

EOD trailing — OB entry advantage

Floor only updates at session close. An OB entry that moves adversely 8 ticks intraday before recovering does not raise the floor against you. You can allow the full structure of the setup to develop without floor pressure.

Best strategy: Enter at the OB or FVG fill, place your stop below the OB low, and hold through the normal structure of the trade. The floor only cares about your closing balance.

Intraday trailing — OB entry risk

Floor updates tick-by-tick on unrealized equity. An OB entry that moves adversely 8 ticks raises the floor 8 ticks before you can react. If the trade was sized at full buffer risk, a normal intraday pullback can breach the account.

Required adjustment: Size intraday-trailing OB entries at 60–70% of your normal buffer-based size. The tighter effective buffer demands tighter position sizing even on Grade A setups.

The OB zone width problem on intraday accounts: An OB zone might span 8–12 ticks on ES. On an intraday trailing account, if you enter at the top of the OB zone and price explores the bottom of the zone before rejecting (normal OB behavior), that 10-tick drawdown into the trade immediately raises your floor 10 ticks. You haven't lost the trade — but you've permanently consumed 10 ticks of floor buffer. On EOD accounts this is irrelevant. On intraday accounts this is real, permanent, and compounding. Solution: always enter at the FVG within the OB, not the OB top.
Position sizing into OBs and FVGs

The rule is simple but consistently violated: size to the buffer, not the account. Here is what that means in practice across the most common prop firm account sizes.

AccountTrailing DDBuffer (10% rule)ES stop (8 ticks)Safe contractsNQ stop (8 ticks)Safe contracts
$25K$1,250$125/trade$100 (8×$12.50)1 MES or 1 ES$200 (8×$25)1 MNQ
$50K$2,500$250/trade$100/contract2 ES or 20 MES$200/contract1 NQ or 10 MNQ
$100K (EOD)$3,000$300/trade$100/contract3 ES or 30 MES$200/contract1 NQ or 15 MNQ
$100K (Static)$625 static$62/trade$100/contract1 MES only until buffer builds$200/contract1 MNQ only
$150K$5,000$500/trade$100/contract5 ES or 50 MES$200/contract2 NQ or 25 MNQ

10% buffer rule = maximum 10% of remaining drawdown buffer risked per trade. All sizes assume 8-tick stop (standard OB/FVG stop placement from rejection candle low). Adjust for your actual stop distance.

The 8-tick stop rule for OBs: Most OB and FVG entries on ES and NQ use a stop placed 1–2 ticks below the OB candle's low or below the FVG's first candle high. In normal market structure, this is 5–10 ticks from entry. If your stop requires more than 10 ticks on ES to be structurally valid, the setup has too wide a risk:reward profile for funded account trading at the $50K level with a $2,500 buffer. Skip it. The next killzone will produce a tighter setup.
Evaluation phase vs funded phase — different rules for OB entries
During the evaluation

The evaluation has a profit target you need to reach within a time window. This creates psychological pressure to find setups. The correct response is the opposite of what the pressure suggests: during an evaluation, only Grade A OB+FVG confluence setups deserve full position sizing. The evaluation does not end if you miss a Grade B setup. It ends if you hit the Daily Loss Limit (DLL) on a Grade C setup you forced because you needed to build toward the target.

During the funded phase

The funded phase has no profit target — only rules to stay within. This changes the calculus: you can be more selective (because there's no deadline) and more consistent (because each payout cycle resets). Grade A setups at full position. Grade B at half position. Grade C skipped without exception. The funded phase rewards patience in a way the evaluation does not have to.

The funded phase advantage: There is no finish line on a funded account. You do not have to hit a profit target by a specific date. A week of no Grade A setups is a week of zero trades — and zero drawdown consumption. This is not a weakness in your trading. It is the most sophisticated form of funded account management: preserving the buffer for the sessions where the model is delivering clearly.
The pre-entry OB/FVG quality filter — your 60-second check

Before entering any OB or FVG setup on a funded account, run through this filter in order. Stop at the first disqualifier.

OB/FVG pre-entry filter — click to check off
0 / 8 checked
Where this guide stops — where the Risk Guard starts
The OB/FVG framework is free.
The daily sizing and buffer check before you execute is the product.
What this page covers (free)
OB and FVG mechanics for funded accounts
Quality tier grading system
EOD vs intraday drawdown risk difference
Sizing to the buffer formula
Pre-entry quality filter checklist
Get the Risk Guard — $49 → How to pass an evaluation
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