Weekly Review
A weekly review is a structured, recurring session, usually held after the Friday close or over the weekend, in which a trader examines the week's trades, adherence to rules and key metrics to extract one or two concrete improvements for the week ahead.
Quick answer: A weekly review is a structured, recurring session, usually held after the Friday close or over the weekend, in which a trader examines the week's trades, adherence to rules and key metrics to extract one or two concrete improvements for the week ahead.
In simple words
A weekly review is a set appointment with yourself, once a week, to look back at how you traded. You go through your trades, check whether you followed your rules, look at a few numbers like win rate and average loss, and pick one thing to fix next week. The daily routine keeps you on track in the moment; the weekly review lets you see patterns that only show up across several days, such as always losing on Wednesdays or always oversizing after a win.
Purpose
A weekly review exists because single days are too noisy to reveal patterns, so aggregating a week of trades and behaviour surfaces recurring mistakes and edges that a daily view misses, turning them into a specific, testable adjustment.
Visual explanation
Weekly Review
A weekly cycle: trade through the week, aggregate and review, extract one improvement, and feed it back into next week's plan.
Professional explanation
Why a weekly cadence is the right zoom level
A single trading day is mostly noise, one or two outcomes drawn from a wide distribution, so judging your trading day by day exaggerates luck and hides pattern. A quarter is too coarse to correct anything in time. A week sits at a useful zoom level: five sessions is enough to smooth out a single unlucky day yet recent enough that you remember the context of each trade. The weekly review is where you step back from execution and look for the recurring themes, the setup that keeps failing, the time of day you lose in, the emotional trigger that precedes your worst trades, that no individual day would reveal on its own.
The structure of a weekly review session
A useful weekly review runs in a fixed order, typically 45 to 60 minutes over the weekend. Start by re-reading the week's journal entries to reconstruct what actually happened. Then compute or read the week's metrics. Next, separate the process from the outcome: how many trades followed your rules versus how many were impulsive, regardless of whether they won. Identify the single biggest leak, the mistake or missed opportunity that cost the most. Finally, convert it into one specific, testable change for next week, phrased as an implementation intention, if X then Y, rather than a vague resolution to do better.
The metrics a weekly review actually looks at
Numbers keep the review honest. The core weekly set includes number of trades, win rate, average win versus average loss, largest single loss, and net profit or loss after costs. Beyond those, track rule adherence, the fraction of trades that matched your plan, and process errors logged. For Indian F&O add cost drag, brokerage, STT, exchange charges and slippage as a share of turnover, because high turnover quietly erodes results. The goal is not to admire a good week or despair over a bad one, but to spot whether the numbers are drifting: rising trade count, widening average loss, or falling rule adherence are early warnings.
The questions a weekly review must answer
Beyond metrics, a weekly review answers a fixed set of questions. Did I follow my trading plan this week, and where did I deviate? Which trade was my best-executed regardless of result, and which was my worst-executed? What emotional state preceded my worst decisions? Did I respect my risk limits and daily loss limits every day? What is the single most costly recurring mistake? And, crucially, what one change will I test next week and how will I measure whether it helped? Answering the same questions each week makes the review comparable over time and prevents it from becoming a vague ramble.
Process score versus outcome, kept separate
The discipline that makes a weekly review valuable is separating how you traded from how much you made. A profitable week that came from breaking rules and getting lucky is a dangerous week, because it reinforces bad habits; a losing week in which you followed every rule is often a good week, because the process was sound and the loss was variance. Scoring the week on rule adherence, then noting the outcome separately, trains you to value process over outcome, the mindset that underpins long-run consistency. Traders who conflate the two chase whatever made money last week and abandon the discipline that actually compounds.
One change at a time, tested and reviewed
The output of a weekly review should be small: at most one or two concrete changes, not a wholesale rebuild. Deliberate practice improves a skill by isolating a single weakness, working on it, and getting feedback, and a weekly review is that loop applied to trading. Changing many things at once makes it impossible to know what worked, and it usually overwhelms the trader into changing nothing at all. Pick the highest-cost leak, phrase the fix as a specific rule, apply it for the coming week, and check next weekend whether the metric it targeted actually improved. Over months this incremental loop compounds into a materially better process.
Practical example
Illustrative example (Indian market)
After Friday's close a trader with Rs 5,00,000 sits down for 50 minutes. Re-reading the journal, they see 11 trades, a 45 percent win rate, average win Rs 6,000, average loss Rs 7,500, and a net loss of Rs 4,000 after costs. Rule adherence was only 7 of 11 trades; the four impulsive trades account for the entire loss and included two revenge trades taken minutes after a stop-out. The metrics are fine; the leak is behavioural. Their one change for next week is an implementation intention: after any losing trade, I will stand up and wait ten minutes before placing another order. They note they will measure success by whether impulsive trades fall below two next week, and log it into the plan.
An index-options trader schedules the weekly review for Saturday because the NSE weekly expiry falls on Thursday, so by the weekend the week's expiry outcome is settled and the data is complete. They add expiry-specific questions: did I hold short options too close to the 15:30 expiry close, and did India VIX spikes catch me oversized? Reviewing after expiry, rather than mid-week, keeps the week a clean unit.
Advantages
- Surfaces recurring patterns that a single noisy day cannot reveal
- Separates process quality from lucky or unlucky weekly outcomes
- Turns vague dissatisfaction into one specific, testable improvement
- Catches drift, rising trade count or widening losses, early
- Builds a comparable record week over week for real deliberate practice
Limitations
- One week is still a small sample, so a single week rarely proves an edge is gone
- It relies on an honest, complete journal; garbage in, garbage out
- Reviewing without acting on the findings makes it a comforting ritual, not improvement
- Overreacting to a single bad week can cause needless strategy changes
- It cannot fix a strategy with no underlying edge, only how consistently you apply one
Why it matters in practice
- It is where a trader stops repeating the same mistake unnoticed
- It converts a week of raw experience into one concrete lesson
Common mistakes
- Skipping the review after a bad week, exactly when it matters most
- Judging the week only by profit and ignoring rule adherence
- Trying to change five things at once instead of one testable fix
- Overreacting to one week and abandoning a sound strategy
- Reviewing without a fixed set of questions, so it drifts into rambling
- Never measuring whether last week's chosen change actually helped
Professional usage
Professional trading operations run structured weekly reviews as a matter of course: performance attribution, a look at which strategies and risk decisions drove the week, and a check of discipline against limits. The emphasis is on process and repeatable behaviour rather than celebrating a good week, and findings feed a deliberate, incremental improvement loop. The discipline of a fixed weekly cadence, comparable questions and one change at a time reflects how skilled performers in many fields improve, without implying that a diligent review makes any future week profitable.
Key takeaways
- A weekly review is a fixed, recurring session to find patterns a day cannot show
- Follow a set structure: re-read journal, read metrics, separate process from outcome
- Answer the same questions each week so reviews are comparable over time
- Output at most one or two specific, testable changes, then measure them
- Score the week on rule-following, not just profit and loss
Frequently asked questions
What is a weekly trading review?
Why review weekly instead of daily or monthly?
When should I do my weekly review?
How long should a weekly review take?
What metrics should a weekly review cover?
What questions should a weekly review answer?
Should I judge the week by profit or process?
How many changes should I make after a review?
What is an implementation intention in this context?
What if I had a losing week?
Can one bad week mean my strategy is broken?
How do I stop the review becoming just a ritual?
What is cost drag and why track it weekly?
Do I need a good journal for a weekly review?
How does a weekly review relate to my daily routine?
Should I compare this week to previous weeks?
Can a weekly review guarantee better results?
What is process attribution in a weekly review?
How do I pick which mistake to fix first?
What tools help with a weekly review?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Weekly Review.
What is a weekly trading review?
Why review weekly and not daily?
When is the best time to do it?
What numbers should I look at?
Should I judge the week by profit?
How many things should I change?
What if I had a bad week?
Does a weekly review guarantee I improve?
Sources & references
- Zerodha Varsity — Trading Psychology & Innerworth
- Kahneman — Thinking, Fast and Slow (noise and outcome bias)
- SEBI — Investor education and F&O studies
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.