Dogecoin (DOGE) is back at a familiar crossroads, and the market is once again doing what it often does best with DOGE: waiting for a small technical trigger to decide whether the next move will be a breakout or just another fade. Crypto analyst Ali Martinez said the level he is watching most closely is $0.1018, arguing that DOGE needs a sustained four-hour close above that resistance, backed by rising volume, to confirm a bullish breakout.
That call comes as Dogecoin is trading near $0.0985, according to CoinMarketCap, with a 24-hour trading volume of about $956.5 million and a market capitalization of roughly $16.7 billion. What makes Martinez’s setup interesting is that Dogecoin has already spent much of April trading in a tight, frustrating range.
DOGE closed at $0.09492 on April 16, $0.09920 on April 17, $0.09955 on April 18, and $0.09490 on April 19, which is exactly the kind of choppy price action that tends to make a nearby resistance level matter even more. In other words, $0.1018 is not just another number on a chart. It is the line separating a market that is still boxed in from one that may finally be ready to expand.
At current prices, that resistance sits only about 3.4% above DOGE, while Martinez’s target of $0.1172 would be roughly 19% above the latest quoted level. Martinez’s earlier comments this week added a bigger on-chain story to the technical setup. He explained that Dogecoin saw a major transaction volume spike on April 16, with nearly $800 million moved in 24 hours, and that large holders accumulated more than $330 million in DOGE over the past week.
That combination matters because it gives the chart context. A token can sit still for days and still be getting quietly repositioned underneath the surface. When volume jumps and whale balances rise during a consolidation, traders often begin to suspect that the market is building energy for a larger move rather than simply drifting sideways.
Breakout Scenario for Dogecoin
The technical case is straightforward. DOGE has been moving inside a parallel channel, and Martinez says the price has already been rejected from the $0.1018 area five times. That is the kind of resistance that traders start to respect, because repeated failures often force weaker buyers to step aside while patient buyers keep leaning in. The bullish version of this story is simple enough.
If DOGE can reclaim $0.1018 on a four-hour basis and hold above it with expanding volume, then the market can begin to price in a move toward the top of the channel at $0.1172. The bearish version is just as easy to understand. If DOGE keeps losing steam right below resistance, the market stays trapped in the same range that has defined the token through much of April.
The broader crypto backdrop is also important here. Bitcoin is trading around $77,934 and Ethereum around $2,335.38, which means the major assets are still providing a constructive, if cautious, environment for speculative names like Dogecoin. When BTC and ETH are stable enough to keep risk appetite alive, meme coins usually have a better chance of attracting volume.
That does not guarantee a breakout, but it does make a breakout more believable if one starts to form. DOGE has always been unusually sensitive to shifts in market mood, and right now the majors are at least giving altcoins some room to breathe. There is also a longer-term institutional angle that should not be ignored. In November 2025, Grayscale launched a Dogecoin-focused fund, a notable sign that DOGE was starting to move further into the world of investable products rather than remaining only a retail-driven meme asset.
Moreover, the SEC previously approved generic listing standards for spot crypto ETFs, a change that simplified the path for new digital-asset products and helped accelerate filings across the crypto market. Recently, Canary Capital filed for a first MOG ETF in the meme-coin category, which shows that the idea of packaged exposure to speculative tokens is no longer limited to BTC and ETH. That matters for DOGE because it keeps the asset in the conversation whenever investors talk about the next wave of crypto products.
For Dogecoin holders, the biggest takeaway may be that this is not the kind of market where patience looks exciting, but it is often the right posture. The token is still sitting just below a key breakout point, and the recent on-chain activity gives the move a bit more credibility than a random chart pattern would on its own.
At the same time, the recent price history shows that DOGE has not yet proven it can stay above the 10-cent area with conviction. That is why Martinez’s watch level matters so much. It is close enough to be within reach, but high enough to force the market to show real strength before the next leg higher can be trusted.
If DOGE clears $0.1018 cleanly, the move toward $0.1172 becomes a realistic technical target rather than wishful thinking. If it fails again, the market likely stays locked in the same tension-filled range that has defined the token through the middle of April. For now, Dogecoin remains exactly what it has been for much of its life: a market where price action, crowd mood, and a few key levels can change the story very quickly.
