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How to Trade AUD/NZD on the Weekly Chart

Everything you need to know about trading AUD/NZD on W1 — when it works, when it doesn't, and how to size your risk for this specific combination.

Reviewed by the Candleread desk · Updated 2026-04-09

The short answer

AUD/NZD on the W1 (Weekly) timeframe is best suited for position traders. AUD/NZD has an average daily range of 55 pips and a typical spread of 2 pips. The best session for this pair is the Asian session, where liquidity peaks and spreads tighten. On W1, each candle represents 10080 minutes of price action, producing about 0.14 candles per day.

Why AUD/NZD on W1?

Australia vs New Zealand — the 'Aussie-Kiwi' cross. Both commodity currencies, so the pair reflects relative economic strength. Tends to range within 1.05–1.10. Breaks happen on RBA/RBNZ policy divergence. Good mean-reversion pair. Thinner liquidity outside Asian hours. On the Weekly timeframe: One candle per week. For macro trend analysis and long-term bias setting. Not used for entries — used for direction. Position traders and anyone setting multi-week or multi-month bias. Typical hold time: 2-12 weeks.

AUD/NZD Key Stats

Here are the numbers that matter when trading AUD/NZD on W1:

  • Category: commodity pair
  • Typical spread: 2 pips
  • Average daily range: 55 pips
  • Best session: Asian session
  • Timeframe: W1 (Weekly) — position
  • Candles per day: 0.14

The Weekly Timeframe Explained

One candle per week. For macro trend analysis and long-term bias setting. Not used for entries — used for direction. Weekly support/resistance levels are among the strongest in technical analysis. Central bank policy cycles play out on this timeframe. One bad week doesn't invalidate a weekly trend.

How to Set Up a AUD/NZD W1 Trade

  1. 1

    Check the higher timeframe trend

    Before entering on W1, check the next timeframe up for the trend direction. If you're trading W1, look at the W1 chart for bias.

  2. 2

    Identify key levels

    Mark support and resistance on the W1 chart for AUD/NZD. Given the 55-pip average range, expect levels spaced 18–28 pips apart.

  3. 3

    Wait for your setup

    Whether you're trading breakouts, pullbacks, or bounces — wait for the setup, don't chase. On W1, patience means waiting for the right candle pattern at the right level.

  4. 4

    Size your position

    Use the position size calculator. Risk 1% of your account. With a typical stop of 22 pips on AUD/NZD W1, that determines your lot size.

  5. 5

    Manage the trade

    On W1, check the trade every once per day. Move stop to breakeven after 1R of profit. Let winners run to 2–3R.

When NOT to Trade This Combination

Avoid AUD/NZD on W1 during the wrong session — AUD/NZD's best session is Asian session and trading outside that window means wider spreads and lower volume. Also avoid right before and during high-impact news releases unless you specifically have a news-trading strategy. On W1, a single news candle can blow through your stop and target in seconds.

Key takeaways

  • AUD/NZD on W1 is a position setup with 55-pip average daily range
  • Best session: Asian session
  • Always check the higher timeframe for trend direction before entering on W1
  • Size positions using the 1% rule — calculator says the lot size, not your gut
  • Spread of 2 pips matters more on shorter timeframes — factor it into your stop

Frequently asked

What is the best timeframe to trade AUD/NZD?+
It depends on your style. Scalpers use M5–M15, day traders use M15–H1, and swing traders use H4–D1. AUD/NZD has enough liquidity and tight enough spreads for all timeframes. The W1 (Weekly) timeframe is best for position traders.
What is the average spread on AUD/NZD?+
On a good ECN broker, AUD/NZD typically has a spread of 2 pips. During Asian session, spreads tighten further. During low-liquidity periods (Asian session for majors, holidays), spreads can widen 2–3x.
How many pips does AUD/NZD move per day?+
AUD/NZD averages about 55 pips per day. This is the Average Daily Range (ADR). On high-impact news days (NFP, CPI, central bank decisions), the range can be 1.5–2x normal.
Is AUD/NZD good for beginners?+
Not recommended for beginners. AUD/NZD has wide spreads (2 pips), thin liquidity outside peak hours, and can move 55+ pips per day. Start with EUR/USD or GBP/USD first.

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