A diagonal spread involves selling a near-term option and buying a longer-term option at different strike prices and different expirations. This combines the directional bias of a vertical spread with the time decay benefits of a calendar spread. You profit from directional movement while collecting theta decay from the short-term option.
Quick Stats:
A diagonal spread consists of two options at different strikes and different expirations:
Short Near-Term Option:
Long Far-Term Option:
The key difference from calendar: Different strikes (diagonal) vs same strike (calendar).
ComponentExampleAmountSell 30 DTE $110 call+$2.50+$250Buy 90 DTE $100 call-$8.00-$800Net Debit$550Max LossDebit paid$550Max ProfitVariable~$450+
Key insight: You're creating a debit spread but with different time horizons.
Structure:
Example - Stock at $100:
Best for: Moderately bullish, expect steady rise to $110+ over time.
Structure:
Example - Stock at $100:
Best for: Moderately bearish, expect steady decline to $90 or below over time.
Structure:
Use: Advanced strategy, essentially covered put without owning short stock.
Structure:
Use: Rare, complex setup for specific scenarios.
Bullish bias:
Bearish bias:
Example: AAPL at $180, technical setup suggests move to $195 over 2-3 months.
Common approaches:
Long StrikeDeltaCostBest ForATM~0.50ModerateBalancedSlightly ITM0.60-0.70HigherMore conservativeSlightly OTM0.40-0.45LowerMore aggressive
Recommended: ATM or slightly ITM for best balance.
Example - Bullish:
Time horizon:
ExpirationBest For60-90 DTEShort-term thesis (1-3 months)90-120 DTEMedium-term thesis (3-4 months)180+ DTE (LEAPS)Long-term thesis (6+ months)
Recommended: 90-120 DTE for most setups.
Example:
Strike selection for short leg:
Bullish call diagonal:
Bearish put diagonal:
Example - Bullish ($180 stock):
Goal: Short strike at level you expect stock to reach or slightly exceed.
Time to expiration:
DTETheta DecayBest For21-30 DTEHighStandard setup30-45 DTEModerateConservative7-14 DTEExtremeAggressive (risky)
Recommended: 21-45 DTE for balance.
Example:
Formula: Net debit paid
Example:
Occurs when: Stock moves significantly against your direction (below long strike for calls, above long strike for puts).
Formula: Complex and variable
Factors affecting max profit:
Rough estimate: 50-150% of debit paid
Example:
Theoretical max: If stock at short strike at near expiration and you roll effectively forever.
At near-term expiration (ideal scenario):
If stock at or near short strike:
Then:
Example: Bullish call diagonal, stock at $180, paid $8.50 debit
Stock Price at Near ExpirationResult$165Max loss: -$850 (long OTM, short worthless)$175Large loss: -$500 (long barely ITM)$180Moderate loss: -$250 (at long strike)$185Small loss/breakeven: $0$190Profit: +$400$195Max profit: +$850 (at short strike)$200Reduced profit: +$600 (short ITM, reduces gain)$210Profit: +$400 (both deep ITM)
Key insight: Maximum profit zone near short strike, profits reduce if stock goes too far.
Setup: MSFT Bullish Diagonal
Trade:
Management Plan:
Outcome:
Why it worked: Stock moved in direction, stayed below short strike, theta decay benefited position.
Net delta reflects directional bias.
Bullish call diagonal example:
Meaning: Stock moves $1 up → Position gains ~$30.
As stock moves:
Net positive theta from near-term decay.
Example:
Meaning: Every day that passes = $6 profit from decay (if stock doesn't move against you).
Reality: You profit from time passage as stock moves toward target.
Net vega typically positive (benefits from IV rise).
Example:
Strategy: Enter when IV is low, benefit if IV rises in back month.
Gamma effects vary:
Near short strike at expiration: Gamma can work against you (short option accelerates losses if breached).
Path 1: Stock at or Near Short Strike (Perfect)
Action: Close Entire Spread
Action: Roll Short Leg (Continue Diagonal)
Example - Rolling:
Path 2: Stock Below Short Strike But Moving Right Direction
Action: Roll and Continue
Path 3: Stock Moved Against You
Action: Close for Loss
Action: Roll Long Option
Stock moving too fast (above short call or below short put):
Option 1: Roll Short Strike Further Out
Example:
Option 2: Close Entire Position
Option 3: Let Short Get Assigned
If profitable early (50%+ of expected profit):
Take profits:
Example:
Long-term approach:
Example:
Advantage: Lower capital than owning 100 shares, similar income.
Diagonal call spread as stock replacement:
Example:
Advantage: 80% less capital, similar returns.
Play through catalyst:
Example:
StrategyDirectionThetaComplexityCapitalDiagonalModeratePositiveHighModerateVertical SpreadStrongNeutralMediumLowCalendarNeutralPositiveHighModerateLong Call/PutStrongNegativeLowLowCovered CallModeratePositiveLowHigh
Use diagonal when: Want directional exposure with theta decay benefit and lower cost
Use vertical when: Strong directional conviction, want simplicity
Use calendar when: Neutral outlook, want pure theta play
Standard approach:
Formula: (Account × 2%) ÷ Diagonal Debit = Number of Diagonals
Examples:
Account SizeMax Risk (2%)Diagonal CostMax Diagonals$25,000$500$8500 (too expensive)$50,000$1,000$8501$100,000$2,000$8502$250,000$5,000$8505
More expensive than calendars due to different strikes.
❌ Stock at $100, buy $100 call, sell $130 call
✅ Need 30% move to capture profit zone
Fix: Keep strikes 5-15% apart maximum
❌ Sell 7 DTE, buy 14 DTE
✅ Not enough time differential
Fix: Use at least 45-60 day spread
❌ Short expires, let long option sit naked
✅ Losing theta benefit
Fix: Roll short leg to continue diagonal if thesis intact
❌ Stock at $198, short $195 call, holding
✅ Bleeding value as both move ITM
Fix: Roll short strike up when stock approaches
❌ Bearish diagonal in strong uptrend
✅ Losing on both directional and theta
Fix: Only use diagonals aligned with trend
Aggressive variation:
Example:
Conservative approach:
Continuous strategy:
Goal: Extract maximum value from one long option.
Before entering any diagonal spread:
✅ Clear directional bias (bullish or bearish)
✅ Expect gradual move, not explosive
✅ Long option ATM or slightly ITM (90-120 DTE)
✅ Short option 5-15% OTM (21-45 DTE)
✅ Time spread of at least 45-60 days
✅ No major catalyst in near-term expiration
✅ Exit plan at 50% profit
✅ Roll plan for short leg if thesis continues
✅ Stop loss if breaks against long strike
✅ Position size ≤ 2% account risk
A diagonal spread involves buying a far-term option (typically 60–90 DTE) at a lower strike and selling a near-term option (typically 30–45 DTE) at a higher strike. It combines the time differential of a calendar spread with the strike differential of a vertical spread. The result is a trade that profits from time decay on the short leg, with limited downside from the long option that retains time value.
A calendar spread uses the same strike for both options — it is a pure time spread. A diagonal spread uses different strikes — it has both a time spread and a directional component. The diagonal is more flexible: you can build it to be bullish (long lower-strike call, short higher-strike call) or bearish (long higher-strike put, short lower-strike put), while calendar spreads are directionally neutral.
Most traders sell the near-term option at a delta of 0.20–0.35. This gives a 65–80% probability of the short option expiring worthless, collecting the full time value. Selling at higher delta increases credit but also increases the chance the short option goes in the money, forcing you to manage the position or roll early.
When the near-term short option expires worthless (ideally), you are left with the far-term long option. You can then sell a new near-term option against it — essentially 'rolling' the trade. This is the repeating cycle in diagonal spreading: the long option acts as a 'base' while you sell successive near-term options against it, collecting premium each time.
Take profit when the short option has lost 50–70% of its value, then roll it (close the expiring short, sell a new near-term option). If the stock moves sharply against you, either close the entire position or adjust the strike of the next short option. Avoid letting the short option expire in-the-money without a plan — assignment risk and early assignment on equity options can complicate the position.
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