Weekly Review Checklist
A short, regular audit of the week just traded, designed to catch drift in discipline and recurring behavioural leaks early, while they are still small and cheap to correct.
Weekly Review Checklist: Once a week, step back from individual trades and look at the aggregate: total R for the week, how consistently you followed your rules, which emotions and mistakes recurred, and whether discipline is drifting. The aim is to find behavioural patterns no single trade reveals, a habit of widening stops, revenge trading after losses, size creep, before they compound. Judge the week on process, not just profit. This is an educational template to adapt, not a signal, and weekly review improves consistency without guaranteeing results.
Individual trades are noisy, but a week of them starts to reveal your process and your psychology. The weekly review is a brief, regular audit that catches problems, a creeping habit of moving stops, over-trading on expiry days, sizing up after wins, while they are still small. It is not about grading profit: a profitable week with broken rules is a warning, and a losing week with clean discipline may be perfectly fine. Aggregate the trades you logged in the post-market reviews. Set aside a fixed slot, often the weekend, so it actually happens.
How to use this: keep it to fifteen to thirty minutes so it is sustainable. You are looking for patterns and drift, not re-living every trade. Any recurring rule-break you find is the single most valuable thing to fix next week.
Review the week's process
- Tally total R for the week, wins and losses in units of risk, rather than fixating on the rupee figure.
- Count how many trades followed your plan versus how many were impulse, FOMO or revenge trades.
- Check whether any trade risked more than your per-trade limit, and whether size crept up over the week.
- Confirm you honoured stops; count any that were widened or ignored, since these are the costliest breaks.
- Confirm you respected your daily loss limits every day; note any day you traded past it.
- Note whether results cluster by day, time or setup, revealing a strength to lean on or a leak to plug.
Spot the behavioural patterns
- Read your emotion notes for the week and identify the feeling that cost you most, fear, greed, FOMO, revenge or boredom.
- Look for a single recurring rule-break; the same mistake appearing repeatedly is your highest-value fix.
- Check whether losses clustered right after a prior loss, a sign of revenge trading or tilt.
- Check whether over-trading spiked on volatile or expiry days, suggesting excitement drove entries rather than setups.
- Notice any bias showing up in the pattern, over-sizing after wins (overconfidence), holding losers (loss aversion), chasing (herd/FOMO).
- Confirm your best trades came from your process, not from luck you might mistake for skill.
Reset for the week ahead
- Write down one specific behavioural improvement to carry into next week, tied to the pattern you found.
- Reconfirm your per-trade risk limit and daily loss limit, adjusting only for a deliberate, written reason.
- Check the coming week's calendar, expiries, results, RBI or macro events, that will shape risk and emotion.
- If the week was emotionally draining or losses mounted, consider trading smaller until clarity and confidence return.
- Confirm your journal is up to date so the monthly review has clean data to draw on.
- Set a clear intention for how you want to show up next week, focused on process, not on a target amount.
Kept short, this review takes fifteen to thirty minutes and prevents the slow drift that quietly erodes discipline. Feed its findings into the monthly review. This is educational information, not psychological advice; if trading stress persistently affects your daily life, consult a qualified professional.
Frequently asked questions
What should a weekly trading review focus on?
How is a weekly review different from the daily one?
How do I find my most damaging habit?
Should a losing week make me change my strategy?
How long should the weekly review take?
What weekly signs suggest I should reduce my size?
Why review the week if I already journal every day?
Does a weekly review guarantee better results?
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.