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Academy/Trading Mastery/Foundations

Understanding the Order Book

Trading Mastery

10 min read

Explore the limit order book structure, how resting orders create liquidity, and what the depth of market reveals about supply and demand.

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Introduction

If you want to see what’s really going on in the market—not what people say, but what they’re doing—you need to understand the order book.

The order book is like an X-ray of the market’s intent. It shows you where people want to buy and sell, at what prices, and in what sizes. For traders, it’s one of the most powerful tools available—but it’s often misunderstood or ignored.

But before you can read the order book correctly, you need to understand the types of orders that traders place. That’s what actually fills the order book—and what causes prices to move.


Types of Orders: Market vs. Limit

All trading orders fall into two basic categories: market orders and limit orders.

Market Order
  • Executes immediately at the best available price.
  • You don’t care what price you get—you just want to enter or exit the trade right now.
  • You’re taking liquidity from the market.

Example: You place a market buy order for 1 BTC. It instantly buys from the lowest available ask—say, at $64,000.

Limit Order
  • Executes only at the price you specify—or better.
  • You’re setting the price, saying: "Only buy/sell if someone accepts this price."
  • You’re providing liquidity to the market.

Example: You place a limit buy order for 1 BTC at $63,500. Your order sits in the book, waiting for someone to sell to you at that price.

TypeExecutionRoleRisk
Market OrderImmediateTakes liquidityWorse-than-expected fill
Limit OrderDelayedProvides liquidityMight never be filled

What Is the Order Book?

Now that you know the two core order types, the order book will make much more sense.

The order book is a real-time list of all limit orders currently waiting to be filled on an exchange. It doesn’t show market orders—those get executed and disappear.

It contains:

  • Bids: Buy limit orders
  • Asks: Sell limit orders

Each level includes:

  • Price (where someone wants to buy/sell)
  • Size (how much they want to trade at that price)

Order Book Structure

Here’s a simple order book snapshot:

Price (USD)Amount (BTC)Type
64,1002.5Ask
64,0003.0Ask
63,9001.2Ask
63,800——— Mid ———
63,7001.5Bid
63,6002.8Bid
63,5003.5Bid
  • Asks (Sell orders): Traders who want to sell. These sit above the current price.
  • Bids (Buy orders): Traders who want to buy. These sit below the current price.
  • The mid-price is the gap between the best bid and best ask. That’s the current market price.

How Orders Are Matched

Trades happen when a market order hits a limit order:

  • A market buy order consumes the lowest available ask.
  • A market sell order consumes the highest available bid.

Each time this happens, the trade moves price slightly in that direction.

Price doesn’t move because of predictions. It moves when someone chooses to buy or sell at a different price than the last trade.


Why Traders Watch the Order Book

The order book helps traders:

  • Spot areas of support (heavy bids)
  • Spot resistance (large asks)
  • Track changes in buyer/seller interest
  • Watch for spoofing (fake walls that suddenly vanish)

Example: If there’s a huge wall of buy orders at $63,000, that might act as a support level… unless those bids disappear before price reaches them.


Using This Information as a Trader

Knowing what kind of orders move the market helps you:

  • Enter stealthily (limit orders near active levels)
  • Avoid poor entries (wide spreads or thin liquidity)
  • Understand if price is moving due to real interest or just temporary imbalance

But be cautious:

  • Large orders can be canceled
  • Some liquidity is hidden (called "iceberg" orders)
  • The order book shows intent, not guarantee

Interactive: Order Book Depth

Drag the imbalance slider to see how bid/ask volume shifts create directional pressure. Notice how the ratio changes as one side of the book grows thicker.

Order Book Depth
2.02.96.05.67.48.08.88.29.210.812.912.112.413.714.13.34.15.97.37.17.09.88.58.711.510.511.113.813.014.5Mid PriceBidsAsks
Bid/Ask Ratio: 50% / 50%Neutral