Reading Options Chains
Introduction: The Options Chain Is Your Control Room
An options chain displays all available calls and puts for a security. It's where you research, analyze, and execute trades. Understanding how to read an options chain is essential. Each column tells a story about liquidity, probability, and value. Learning to interpret this data quickly makes you a better trader.
Anatomy of an Options Chain
A typical options chain displays:
- Strike Price: The fixed price for the option
- Calls Section: Left side, call option data
- Puts Section: Right side, put option data
- Bid/Ask: Current market prices
- Last: Last trade price (not always live)
- Volume: Number of contracts traded today
- Open Interest (OI): Total open contracts
- Greeks: Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega, Rho
- Implied Volatility (IV): Market's volatility expectation
Understanding the Column Data
| Column | What It Shows | How To Use It |
|---|---|---|
| Strike | The exercise price | Filter for ITM/ATM/OTM selection |
| Bid | Highest price buyer will pay NOW | What you get if you sell immediately |
| Ask | Lowest price seller will accept NOW | What you pay if you buy immediately |
| Last | Price of last trade (may be stale) | Reference only; bid/ask is current |
| Volume | Contracts traded today | Higher = more liquid, tighter spreads |
| OI | Total open contracts ever | Higher = more interest in strike |
| IV | Implied Volatility % | Higher IV = more expensive, higher probability of big move |
| Delta | Probability of expiring ITM; also option price move per $1 stock move | 0.70 = 70% probability ITM + move $0.70 per $1 stock move |
| Gamma | Rate of delta change; leverage | Higher gamma = more leverage, more gamma risk near ATM |
| Theta | Daily time decay | Negative = buyer loses; positive = seller profits |
| Vega | Sensitivity to IV changes | Higher vega = option price more affected by volatility |
Call Side vs Put Side
A chain displays calls on the left and puts on the right, with the strike price in the middle. Both are vertically aligned at the same strike.
CALLS (Left) | STRIKE | PUTS (Right)
Bid $10 / Ask $10.25 | $180 | Bid $0.05 / Ask $0.15
Bid $5.50 / Ask $5.75 | $185 | Bid $0.20 / Ask $0.35
Bid $2.00 / Ask $2.25 | $190 | Bid $1.00 / Ask $1.25
Bid $0.50 / Ask $0.75 | $195 | Bid $3.50 / Ask $3.75
Bid $0.10 / Ask $0.25 | $200 | Bid $8.00 / Ask $8.25
Notice the relationship: As you move down (higher strikes), call prices decrease and put prices increase. This makes sense: calls are worth less at higher strikes (further from current price); puts are worth more at higher strikes.
Color Coding Conventions
Many platforms use color coding to help you understand data at a glance:
- Bid/Ask Columns: Often green (buy opportunity) or red (sell opportunity)
- Greeks: Positive green, negative red
- Volume Spikes: Highlighted to show unusual activity
- Moneyness: Sometimes shaded differently (ITM darker, OTM lighter)
These are conventions, not standards. Each platform (TastyTrade, thinkorswim, etc.) has its own color scheme. Learn your platform's system.
Identifying High-Volume Strikes
High-volume strikes are popular, which means liquidity and tight spreads. Look for volume > 500 per day. These are your go-to strikes for trading.
• Recent Activity: Trading happened here
• Liquidity: You can get in and out easily
• Popular Strike: Other traders agree this is important
• Tight Spreads: Market makers quoting actively
Low volume (< 50/day) = Avoid unless you're patient on entries/exits
Spotting Unusual Activity
Sometimes unusual activity signals something important:
- Volume Spikes: Sudden increase in trading. Might indicate institutional activity, earnings, or insider information.
- IV Spikes: Sudden increase in volatility. Usually before earnings or major news.
- Wide Spreads Tightening: Market makers more confident. Increased interest.
- Open Interest Increasing: More traders building positions. Strike becoming more popular.
Note: Unusual activity doesn't predict direction. It just signals attention. You still need to make your own directional decision.
Sample Options Chain Walkthrough
Scenario: Tesla (TSLA) stock at $245, looking at 45-DTE call options
| Strike | Bid | Ask | Volume | OI | IV | Delta | Theta | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $230 | $18.75 | $19.00 | 120 | 3,200 | 28% | 0.85 | -0.08 | Deep ITM, popular, liquid |
| $240 | $9.50 | $9.75 | 850 | 12,500 | 30% | 0.70 | -0.12 | Slightly ITM, high volume, excellent liquidity |
| $245 | $5.50 | $5.75 | 2,100 | 25,000 | 32% | 0.52 | -0.18 | ATM, very high volume/OI, most liquid |
| $250 | $2.75 | $3.00 | 1,200 | 18,000 | 34% | 0.33 | -0.15 | Slightly OTM, good volume, liquid |
| $260 | $0.45 | $0.65 | 150 | 2,500 | 36% | 0.12 | -0.05 | Far OTM, low volume, low interest |
What This Chain Tells You:
- $245 (ATM) is most popular and liquid - best for trading
- $240-250 range has good volume - safe strikes to trade
- $260 (far OTM) has low volume - avoid unless patient
- IV at 32% is moderate - options fairly valued
- Higher IV on OTM strikes ($260 at 36%) - OTM premium is expensive
Practical Walkthrough: Reading TastyTrade/thinkorswim
On TastyTrade: The chain shows calls on the left, puts on the right. Columns are in standard order. Color coding highlights bid/ask spreads (tight spreads in darker green). High volume options are bolded or highlighted.
On thinkorswim: Similar layout. The chain can be customized to show/hide columns. IV and Greeks are displayed. Volume colors help spot unusual activity.
Key Habit: Every time you look at a chain, verify the stock price, expiration date, and update time. Sometimes data lags. Always confirm currency (points per share vs percentage).
Summary: Master the Chain
The options chain is your command center. Understanding bid/ask spreads, volume, OI, Greeks, and IV lets you quickly assess which strikes are worth trading and which to avoid. High-volume, ATM/slightly OTM strikes are your friends. Far OTM illiquid strikes are your enemies. Spend time reading chains, and you'll develop intuition about market structure and value that separates good traders from great ones.