💨 Price Volatility Thresholds
Settings → Devices & Services → Tibber Prices → Configure → 💨 Price Volatility
Volatility sensors measure how much prices vary throughout the day using the Coefficient of Variation (CV) — the ratio of the standard deviation to the mean. A higher CV means more extreme price swings and greater optimization potential.
See Volatility Sensors for a full explanation of all volatility sensors and how to use them in automations.
Thresholds
These thresholds define the boundaries between volatility levels:
| Level | Default CV | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Moderate | ≥ 15% | Noticeable variation — some optimization potential |
| High | ≥ 30% | Significant swings — good for timing optimization |
| Very High | ≥ 50% | Extreme volatility — maximum optimization benefit |
Days below the Moderate threshold are classified as Low volatility.
Adjusting for your market
The defaults work well for most European electricity markets. You may want to adjust if:
- Your market rarely exceeds 20% CV: Lower the Moderate threshold to 10% so you still get meaningful classifications
- Your market routinely hits 50%+ CV: Raise the Very High threshold to 70%+ to distinguish truly exceptional days
The Price Trend thresholds automatically widen on high-volatility days to prevent constant state changes. Changes here indirectly affect trend sensitivity.
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