Elliott Wave — Complex Corrections: Double Three (WXY)

When simple corrections aren't enough, the market combines them. A double three is two simple corrective patterns stitched together by a connector wave — and it's why corrections can drag on far longer than anyone expects.


Simple vs Complex Corrections

All six corrective patterns fall into two categories:

Simple (single pattern) Complex (combined patterns)
Zigzag (5-3-5) Double three / WXY (this lesson)
Regular flat (3-3-5) Triple three / WXYXZ (next lesson)
Expanded flat (3-3-5)
Running flat (3-3-5)
Triangle (3-3-3-3-3)

Simple corrections have a straightforward ABC structure. They're shorter, easier to analyse, and occur in clearer market conditions.

Complex corrections combine multiple simple corrections together using connecting waves. They're longer, more intricate, involve more waves and patterns, and typically occur in volatile or uncertain conditions requiring extended consolidation.

All a complex correction really is: multiple zigzags, flats, and/or triangles joined together.

Quick Recap — Simple Correction Characteristics


What Is a Double Three (WXY)?

A WXY is a combination of two simple corrective patterns connected by an X wave:

Key rules for what can appear where:

Position Can Be Can't Be
W Zigzag, flat Triangle (can't start with a triangle)
X Zigzag, flat, triangle — (anything goes)
Y Zigzag, flat, triangle — (triangles allowed at the end, just like wave E in a triangle)

Each of W, X, and Y is itself an ABC structure (three waves). So the overall count is ABC-ABC-ABC = nine waves of corrective movement.


How to Identify a WXY

The key identifier: the market is moving in waves of three, not five.

If the first leg down isn't five waves (so it's not a zigzag's wave A), and it's not a 3-3 setting up a flat — look for three sets of ABCs connected together. Each individual ABC is a simple correction you already know how to identify. The WXY is just those simple corrections chained.

Practical approach:

  1. See a completed ABC → that's your W
  2. See a connecting wave (smaller correction) → that's your X
  3. See another completed ABC → that's your Y
  4. Label it WXY

The "isolation" technique: If you're struggling to see the pattern, mentally isolate each section. Take the first section alone — is it a zigzag? A flat? An expanded flat? Then take the second section alone — zigzag? Flat? Triangle? If each section is a valid simple correction on its own, and they're connected by a smaller corrective wave, you've got a WXY.


Common Combinations

Any combination of simple corrections is valid. Some real examples:


Key Characteristics

Corrective nature: WXY patterns are corrective — they move sideways or counter-trend. They are NOT impulse waves.

Typically sideways: Most WXY patterns produce big drawn-out sideways consolidations. This is how you get those massive periods where price goes nowhere for months or years. However, they CAN be deep corrections too — not always sideways.

Size relationship: The X wave is usually smaller than the W and Y waves. Pattern is: bigger → smaller → bigger.

Flexibility: Because W, X, and Y can each be different types of corrections, the pattern's appearance varies enormously. This is what makes them hard to identify — no two WXY patterns look the same.

Pattern extension: Sometimes after Y completes, the market keeps correcting with another X-Z, turning the WXY into a WXYXZ (triple three). This is covered in the next lesson.


Why Complex Corrections Matter

"It's a lot easier to pick a top than to pick a bottom."

Impulse waves are relatively straightforward — five waves up, maybe an extension or diagonal, clear rules. Picking tops with divergence, volume, and market structure works well.

But corrections can be a zigzag, a flat, a triangle, a WXY, a WXYXZ, or any combination. You might think the correction ended after a WXY, then another XZ comes and it keeps going. This is why:


Practical Tips


Revision #1
Created 10 May 2026 11:55:20 by Conor
Updated 10 May 2026 11:58:03 by Conor