Ethereum liquidation map pins $874m long trapdoor and $403m short cliff
Coinglass data show Ethereum longs face about $874m in liquidations below $2,206, while shorts risk roughly $403m above $2,412, creating two key forced‑flow bands.
- Coinglass data show that if Ethereum’s price drops below $2,206, cumulative long liquidations across major centralized exchanges would reach about $874 million.
- On the upside, a clean break above $2,412 would flip pressure onto shorts, with roughly $403 million in cumulative short liquidations triggered on mainstream CEXs at that level.
- These bands mark two key liquidation “walls” where concentrated leverage could turn a 5%–6% move in spot ETH into a much larger derivatives-driven cascade in either direction.
Derivatives analytics platform Coinglass is flagging fresh stress points on Ethereum’s futures liquidation heatmap, with hundreds of millions of dollars in leverage stacked just above and below current prices.
Coinglass heatmap flags ETH’s next forced‑flow zones
According to the latest heatmap bands, if ETH slides under roughly $2,206, the cumulative notional value of long positions queued for forced closure on leading centralized exchanges would reach about $874 million.
Conversely, if ETH breaks convincingly above around $2,412, Coinglass estimates that shorts worth roughly $403 million would be pushed into liquidation, as margin requirements are breached and exchanges auto-close positions.
Coinglass explains in its ETH liquidation documentation that the heatmap aggregates open leveraged long and short positions by price band and shows where liquidations are most likely to cluster, turning those zones into de facto “trapdoors” or “ceiling panels” for the market.
Why these levels matter for ETH traders
Liquidations are mechanically simple but systemically important: when price crosses a band with heavy leverage, exchanges sell (for over‑levered longs) or buy (for over‑levered shorts) into the move, often accelerating the initial direction.
As MEXC noted in a recent analysis of a similar setup near $2,000, nearly $1.8 billion in ETH leverage concentrated in a narrow range turned a modest spot move into a near‑vertical “liquidation wick” as long and short positions were flushed in quick succession.
In the current configuration, a break below $2,206 could unleash roughly twice as much forced selling from longs as the buy‑side pressure shorts would face above $2,412, suggesting downside de‑leveraging may be more violent unless positioning shifts.
For active traders, these bands often become reference points for stop‑loss placement and position sizing: trading into a heavy liquidation wall without a plan risks getting caught in a cascade, while waiting for those zones to clear can offer cleaner entries once excess leverage has been washed out.
Options desks and basis traders also watch the heatmap closely, since large liquidation events can briefly blow out implied volatility and funding rates, creating opportunities to sell rich options or capture dislocated spreads—provided they are positioned with enough cushion to survive the initial shock.