What Is VWAP? Understanding Volume-Weighted Average Price
VWAP stands for Volume-Weighted Average Price. It is a trading benchmark that shows the average price an asset has traded at over a period, weighted by how much volume traded at each price. Unlike a simple average, VWAP gives more importance to prices where a lot of trading occurred, so it reflects where the bulk of activity actually took place — not just where price happened to touch.
How VWAP is calculated
Conceptually, VWAP adds up the value of all trades (each price multiplied by the volume traded at it) and divides by the total volume over the period. The result is a single line on the chart that represents the volume-weighted "centre of gravity" of trading.
An important detail: VWAP is normally calculated intraday, resetting at the start of each trading session. That makes it especially popular among short-term and day traders, who use it as a same-day reference point. It differs from a moving average, explained in moving averages, in two ways — it incorporates volume, and it typically covers a single session rather than a rolling window.
How traders use VWAP
VWAP is used both as a benchmark and as a signal:
- As a fair-value reference. Large institutions often measure execution quality against VWAP — buying below it or selling above it is considered favourable. This is one reason the level attracts attention.
- As a trend gauge. Price trading above VWAP is often read as intraday strength, and below it as intraday weakness.
- As dynamic support or resistance. Traders watch how price behaves when it returns to the VWAP line, sometimes treating it like a magnet or a decision point.
VWAP is frequently combined with other tools. A move away from VWAP on expanding volatility — the concept covered in volatility (VOL) — or a decisive push through it can be viewed alongside signals like those in breakouts.
An important caveat
Because standard VWAP resets each session, it is designed for intraday context and is less meaningful as a long-term tool. It is also, like all indicators, backward-looking — it summarises what has already traded. It informs a view; it does not predict the next move, and price can move away from VWAP just as easily as toward it.
A worked example
Imagine a trader watching an asset during a single session.
- Price opens, sells off, then recovers to trade back near the VWAP line.
- The trader notes whether price reclaims and holds above VWAP (a sign of intraday strength) or gets rejected there (a sign of weakness).
- Combined with volume and the broader trend, this helps frame how the session is developing.
Because VWAP is a reference, not a guarantee, acting on it carries risk, and leverage magnifies it. Anyone using VWAP in futures or perpetual contracts should predefine risk. This is educational information, not trading advice.
Anchored VWAP: a useful variation
A popular variation is the anchored VWAP, which starts its calculation from a specific point the trader chooses — such as a major high, a major low, or the date of an important event — rather than resetting at the start of each session. Because it is anchored to a meaningful moment, it can extend across many sessions and answer a different question: "what is the average price everyone has paid since that event?" Some traders use it to judge whether buyers or sellers who entered around a key turning point are, on average, in profit or loss. Like standard VWAP, anchored VWAP is a reference line rather than a prediction, and it works best combined with trend and volume analysis. It simply gives the trader flexibility over where the volume-weighted average begins.
Related concepts
- Moving average (MA): a related but volume-blind averaging tool — moving averages.
- Volatility (VOL): the price movement around the VWAP line — volatility (VOL).
- Breakout: a signal often watched alongside a VWAP push — breakouts.
Summary
VWAP is the volume-weighted average price over a period, usually intraday, and it shows where most trading activity actually happened. Traders use it as a fair-value benchmark, a trend gauge, and a dynamic support/resistance level. Because it resets each session and looks backward, it is best used as intraday context alongside other tools.
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, financial, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency and derivatives trading involve significant risk. Always do your own research.
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