Dogecoin is trading below $0.10 after a 17% spike, with a rare double‑bottom, rising open interest and external forecasts all clustering around a $0.11–$0.16 near‑term target.
Summary
- Dogecoin is trading just under $0.10 after a 17% weekly spike, with derivatives data and a rare double‑bottom pattern pointing to a potential move toward $0.14–$0.16.
- Open interest on DOGE futures has climbed more than 12% in 24 hours on Bybit alone, with over 1.1 billion DOGE entering derivatives markets as funding turns positive and spot volume rebounds above $2.6 billion.
- Short‑term technicals and external analyst forecasts cluster around a $0.11–$0.16 range for March–April 2026, while longer‑term models project a slower grind higher with average 2026 prices near $0.10–$0.11.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is changing hands around the $0.09–$0.10 band after a volatile March that saw the largest memecoin jump 17% in a single session to a weekly high of $0.103, before slipping back below the psychologically important $0.10 level. With Elon Musk’s continued fixation on what is arguably the world’s cutest crypto, where could price action go from here?
A March 4 analysis from crypto.news noted that “Dogecoin price shot up 17% to a weekly high of $0.103 on Thursday morning Asian time before settling at $0.096,” as reports of U.S.–Iran negotiations calmed broader market fears and futures demand surged. Later in the month, BingX reported that “Dogecoin (DOGE) fell below the $0.10 level after previously reaching $0.1041 earlier in the week,” with the token trading at $0.0926, down 3.31% on the day.
Under the surface, positioning is tightening. MEXC relayed CryptoQuant data showing that “the Dogecoin (DOGE) price has reversed its growth from earlier in the week, when it traded at a high of $0.1041,” but highlighted that “net long positions and open interest on DOGE are showing an upward trend,” with a more than 12% surge in open interest on Bybit and over 1.1 billion DOGE committed to futures in 24 hours. CoinGlass figures cited by crypto.news show DOGE spot and futures volume jumping to over $2.6 billion, up from $1.4 billion just days earlier, while futures open interest stabilized above the $1.2 billion range and weighted funding turned green.
Technically, Dogecoin has carved out what analysts describe as a rare double‑bottom structure that, if confirmed, would imply a 50% rally from current levels. “Dogecoin (DOGE) token was trading at $0.09 today, March 10, up slightly from this month’s low of $0.087,” crypto.news wrote on March 9, adding that the token “has formed a double‑bottom‑like pattern at $0.0877, its lowest level in February and March. Its neckline was at $0.1170, its highest swing on February 15 this year.” The analysis calculates a height of roughly $0.03 between the $0.0877 bottom and the $0.117 neckline, “giving it a target of $0.1470,” about 50% above the then‑current price.
Momentum indicators appear to support that setup. “Dogecoin price is close to confirming a bullish symmetrical triangle breakout,” crypto.news wrote in a separate March 4 piece, noting that the MACD lines were turning upward and the RSI was near a breakout from neutral territory—conditions that “often [provide] the spark needed for a massive rally during periods of high market volatility.” By March 10, the same outlet observed that “the Relative Strength Index has jumped to the neutral point of 50, while the MACD indicator is nearing the zero line,” both signals that bears are losing control. Still, both reports stress that “a break below the $0.080 support would invalidate the bullish setup,” making the $0.08–$0.09 zone a clear line in the sand.
External forecasters are broadly aligned with the idea of upside toward the low‑ to mid‑teens cents, but diverge sharply on how far and how fast DOGE can run beyond that band. A February 23 technical note from MEXC argued that “Dogecoin trades at $0.10 with neutral RSI at 42.18,” and projected that “DOGE could target $0.11–$0.12 resistance levels within 4–6 weeks if key support at $0.09 holds firm.” Analyst Zach Anderson said on February 5 that “Dogecoin shows oversold signals at $0.10 with RSI at 28.56… potential bounce to $0.12–$0.14 range within 4–6 weeks if key support holds,” while Terrill Dicki suggested on February 18 that “DOGE price prediction targets $0.11 resistance short‑term, with potential for $0.16 by March 2026.”
Crypto.news echoed those levels in a February 26 feature on low‑priced tokens, stating that “DOGE trades around $0.09–$0.10, with targets at $0.11–$0.16 into March 2026 as neutral RSI and healthy spot volume leave room for upside if BTC and ETH stabilize and U.S. tax refunds fuel risk appetite.” Longer‑horizon models are more conservative. Changelly’s March 22 outlook projects that Dogecoin “will not fall below $0.0876 in March 2026, with a chance of peaking at $0.0913… the average trading value is expected to be $0.0895,” while its 2026 average price forecast sits around $0.106 with a potential 24.3% return. CoinCodex sees DOGE “forecasted to hit $0.1149 by the end of 2026 (+27.85% compared to current rates),” and Binance’s own predictive ranges place April 2026 average prices near $0.1713, with a maximum scenario just above $0.25 if risk appetite returns.
That leaves a clear split in the Dogecoin price prediction debate: short‑term traders are keying on chart structures and derivatives positioning that point toward $0.11–$0.16, while model‑driven forecasters are still anchored around $0.09–$0.11 averages for 2026, reflecting Dogecoin’s dependence on broader market cycles and meme‑driven flows.

