US 100
Education

Ultimate Guide to Master ICT Killzones

12 608
Why Timing Matters Just as Much as Price

Smart Money Concepts (SMC) and ICT methodologies are built on the idea that markets are manipulated by large players with precision. While most traders obsess over price levels, entry models, and liquidity zones, many fail to realize that none of those matter if they happen at the wrong time. Time is not an afterthought, it's a core part of the edge.

Price can show you where the move might happen, but time shows you when smart money is most likely to act. That window of action is what ICT calls the killzone.

What Are Killzones?

Killzones are specific time periods in the trading day when smart money typically executes large moves. These sessions have predictable volatility and institutional order flow. They are not just random hours, they coincide with major session opens and overlaps.
The most relevant killzones are:
  • London Killzone (LKO), 2 AM to 5 AM EST
  • New York Killzone (NYKO), 7 AM to 10 AM EST
  • New York Lunch/Dead Zone, 11:30 AM to 1 PM EST (low probability, often reversal traps)

Each killzone offers unique opportunities depending on how liquidity has been engineered prior. ICT-style setups are most reliable when they form within, or directly in anticipation of, these windows.

The Trap Before the Real Move

Smart money loves to trap retail traders. This trap usually happens just before or early in a killzone. For example, if price takes out a key high at 2:30 AM EST (London open), many retail traders see a breakout. But those in tune with SMC see it as a classic liquidity raid, bait before the reversal.

Once that external liquidity is taken, smart money shows its hand with displacement, a sudden, aggressive move in the opposite direction. This typically forms a clean imbalance (Fair Value Gap) or a breaker block. That’s your cue.

If the price returns to that level within the killzone, that’s the optimal entry window.

Confluence is King: Time, Liquidity, and Structure
The most reliable SMC setups happen when:
  • Liquidity is swept early into a killzone
  • Displacement confirms the real direction during the killzone
  • Entry happens via return to an FVG or OB created within that same session

The setup might still look right if it forms outside these windows, but without proper timing, it’s often just noise or engineered liquidity to trap impatient traders.

Real-World Example: NY Killzone Short
  1. NY, At 8:30 AM EST, price runs above the Asian highs, sweeping liquidity
  2. Displacement, Sharp bearish move breaks structure to the downside at 8:45 AM
  3. Entry, Price retraces into the 5M FVG at 9:10 AM
  4. Result, Clean reversal into a nice profit trageting liquidity, all within the NY session

snapshot
Outside of this killzone structure, the same setup likely would have chopped or failed.

Common Mistakes Traders Make With Time
  • Chasing price outside of killzones, Setup might look good, but volume is thin and no follow-through comes
  • Assuming all killzones are equal, London setups are often cleaner in structure, while NY has more manipulation around news
  • Forcing trades in NY lunch, Midday reversals do happen, but they’re lower probability. If you're not already in a position by 11 AM EST, it's often best to wait for the next day

The Discipline Edge

Most traders overtrade not because they lack setups, but because they don’t filter based on time. By only trading when price interacts with your levels during active killzones, you immediately reduce the number of bad trades and increase your focus on meaningful opportunities.

Good setups are rare. Good setups in the right timing window are even rarer. That’s where consistency comes from.

Final Thoughts

Time is not optional. In SMC and ICT, it’s not enough to have the level, you need the timing. Killzones are your filter, your edge, and your context for every trade.
Once you understand how time and price move together, and stop treating every moment on the chart equally, your trading will start to reflect the true flow of smart money.
Wait for time, wait for price, then strike.

___________________________________

Thanks for your support!
If you found this guide helpful or learned something new, drop a like 👍 and leave a comment, I’d love to hear your thoughts! 🚀

Make sure to follow me for more price action insights, free indicators, and trading strategies. Let’s grow and trade smarter together! 📈

Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.