- Dogecoin has dropped 25% since mid-September highs, now testing key support at $0.20–$0.22.
- Bullish divergence in RSI hints sellers are weakening, raising odds of a rebound.
- Holding support could unlock a 30% rally, but a breakdown risks a slide to $0.18.
Dogecoin’s hot run in early September has cooled off, with the price giving back about 25% since tagging $0.30 on September 13. Now it’s sitting right on top of a cluster of support levels that have triggered rebounds more than once this cycle. The big question—does DOGE still have fuel for another push higher, or are we looking at a reset?
From a broader view, DOGE has actually been in an uptrend since June, climbing nearly 60% in three months. A rising trendline that’s been intact since April has acted like a springboard every time price touched it. Historically, rebounds off this line have delivered 30–40% rallies. At the moment, Dogecoin is pressing into that zone near $0.22, where horizontal support and the 200-day EMA both sit. If buyers step up here, a move back into the $0.27–$0.29 range looks entirely doable—a solid 30% upside from current levels. On the flip side, losing the $0.20–$0.22 band could quickly drag price toward $0.18.
RSI Signals Divergence as Sellers Slow Down
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits around 43, which isn’t oversold yet, but it’s close. What makes things interesting is the bullish divergence starting to appear. Price has been sliding lower, but the RSI has stopped making new lows and is curving upward. That kind of setup often means sellers are losing steam, even if the chart doesn’t show it yet.
When divergences like this appear at strong support zones—like $0.22 and the 200-day EMA—the odds for a rebound get better. It’s not a guarantee, but it tilts the probability toward buyers regaining control, at least for a tradable move higher.
$0.20 Level Stands Out as Critical Support
Analyst Ali Martinez pointed out that $0.20 is the most important level on the board for DOGE, based on Realized Price Distribution. Basically, it’s the level where a ton of coins last moved, meaning a lot of holders bought around there. Historically, that’s a sticky zone. People anchored near $0.20 don’t like selling for a loss, and fresh buyers often see it as a fair entry point.
Earlier research has also flagged the same zone as heavy with trading activity, reinforcing why it matters so much. If DOGE can hold $0.20–$0.22, another rebound looks well within reach. But if it cracks that level, then the door opens to a deeper pullback, and short-term sentiment could sour fast.