ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range: 3 Steps + Example

This concept is based on how Smart Money delivers and re-delivers price to specific imbalanced areas — and how they rebalance those areas over time.

In simple words:

The Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range is an area where price has previously moved impulsively, creating imbalance — and later, price returns to that area and re-delivers into it to balance price efficiently.

Think of it like this:
Smart Money doesn’t always fill imbalance in one go.

Sometimes, they return to it multiple times — slowly rebalancing the price over time.


1. Let’s Break It Down: ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range

To understand this concept fully, you need to know three basic terms:

  1. Imbalance / Fair Value Gap (FVG)
    When price moves quickly and leaves a gap between candles.
  2. Rebalancing
    When price returns to fill that imbalance.
  3. Redelivery
    When price comes back again — after a partial fill — to complete the balancing.

2. Why Does This Happen in ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range?

Smart Money doesn’t always have time (or liquidity) to enter all their positions in a single candle or move.

So, they may:

  • Deliver price quickly through an area (creating imbalance)
  • Return to it once (partial rebalance)
  • Return again later (second or third redelivery)
  • Fully rebalance the price range eventually

This repeated return is what ICT refers to as redelivered rebalanced price range.


3. Example of Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range in ICT

Let’s look at an example to make this clear.


Step 1: Price Creates an Imbalance

Imagine EUR/USD shoots up from 1.0800 to 1.0900 within one H1 candle, leaving a Fair Value Gap between 1.0830–1.0850.

This is an imbalance — an inefficient delivery of price.


Step 2: Partial Rebalance

Two days later, price comes back to 1.0850, touches the top of the imbalance, and reverses.

This is a partial rebalance.

Smart Money may have only partially filled their pending orders.


Step 3: Redelivery and Full Rebalance

Later that week, price comes back again — this time to 1.0830, the bottom of the imbalance.

It re-delivers price into the same FVG zone — this time completing the rebalancing.

Now, the area is considered fully balanced and price may leave it for good.


4. How to Use ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range in Trading

  1. Mark all Fair Value Gaps (especially after strong moves)
  2. Note which ones were partially filled
  3. Expect price to return again to fully rebalance them
  4. Watch for entries (like Order Blocks or BOS) when price redelivers into these zones

1. Trade Setup Example

  • Market moves impulsively from 1.2500 to 1.2600
  • Leaves imbalance at 1.2530–1.2550
  • Price retraces only to 1.2550 and reverses (partial rebalance)

Later:

  • Price comes back to 1.2530
  • Shows bullish displacement
  • You enter long targeting the external high (1.2620)

This is a high-probability entry based on the Redelivered Rebalanced Range.


5. Why ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range in Trading is Powerful

  • It helps you anticipate future entries
  • It confirms that Smart Money isn’t done with that price level
  • It lets you enter with confidence, especially when combined with other ICT tools like Order Blocks and FVGs

6. Final Thoughts

The ICT Redelivered Rebalanced Price Range teaches us that price may revisit the same imbalance zones multiple times before fully completing its job.

So, next time price only partially rebalances a Fair Value Gap — don’t forget about it.

Mark it.

Wait for price to return.

Use structure (like CHoCH or BOS) to confirm your entry.

This is how Smart Money trades.


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