Frequency tagging is a powerful approach to investigate the neural processing of sensory features, and is recently adapted to study the neural correlates of superordinate structures, i.e., chunks, in complex sequences such as speech and music. The nesting of sequence structures, the necessity to control the periodicity in sensory features, and the low-frequency nature of sequence structures pose new challenges for data analysis and interpretation. Here, I discuss how to interpret the frequency of a sequential structure, and factors that need to be considered when analyzing the periodicity in a signal. Finally, a safe procedure is recommended for the analysis of frequency-tagged responses.