Iron Condor

Master the iron condor: sell OTM put and call spreads to profit from low volatility markets. Payoff diagram, setup, breakevens, and professional management rules for 2026.

March 26, 2026
Iron Condor — Profit & Loss at Expiration
$84 $90 $93 $95 $105 $107 $110 $116 Stock Price at Expiration +$2 $0 −$3 Profit / Loss Max Profit: $2 B/E $93 B/E $107 Long Put Short Put Short Call Long Call

What Is an Iron Condor?

An iron condor combines a bull put spread and a bear call spread on the same underlying stock with the same expiration. You profit when the stock stays within a specific price range, collecting premium from both sides while the market does nothing.

Quick Stats:

  • Max Loss: Spread width minus total credit received
  • Max Profit: Total credit received from both spreads
  • Breakeven: Two breakevens (lower and upper)
  • Best For: Neutral outlook, range-bound markets, high IV

When to Use an Iron Condor

✅ Ideal Conditions

  • Stock trading in defined range with no clear direction
  • High implied volatility (collect fat premiums)
  • Low volatility expected (stock will stay range-bound)
  • Earnings over, major catalysts behind us
  • Market consolidating or choppy
  • Want to profit from stagnation

❌ Avoid When

  • Strong trending market (up or down)
  • Major catalyst approaching (earnings, FDA, economic data)
  • Low IV environment (premiums too small)
  • Stock breaking out of range
  • High correlation to volatile indices during turbulent times

How Iron Condors Work

The Four Legs

An iron condor consists of four options creating two credit spreads:

Put Spread (Lower Side):

  • Sell put at higher strike (collect premium)
  • Buy put at lower strike (protection)

Call Spread (Upper Side):

  • Sell call at lower strike (collect premium)
  • Buy call at higher strike (protection)

You build "walls" on both sides. As long as price stays between your short strikes, you keep all premium.

Credit Structure

ComponentExampleAmountSell $95 put+$1.50+$150Buy $90 put-$0.50-$50Sell $110 call+$1.50+$150Buy $115 call-$0.50-$50Net Credit$200Max ProfitCredit received$200Max LossWidth - credit$300

Breakevens: $93 (put side) and $112 (call side)

How to Set Up an Iron Condor

Step 1: Identify Range-Bound Stock

Look for:

  • Stock consolidating between support and resistance
  • Low recent volatility despite high IV
  • Sideways price action for weeks
  • No upcoming catalysts

Example: Stock trading between $95 and $105 for 3 weeks, currently at $100.

Step 2: Select Your Short Strikes

Put side (lower):

  • Place at or below support level
  • Typically 1 standard deviation OTM
  • ~30 delta or less

Call side (upper):

  • Place at or above resistance level
  • Typically 1 standard deviation OTM
  • ~30 delta or less

Example: Stock at $100

  • Sell $95 put (support, -0.30 delta)
  • Sell $110 call (resistance, 0.30 delta)

Probability: 30 delta = roughly 70% chance of expiring OTM.

Step 3: Select Wing Width

Common widths:

WidthRisk/RewardBest For$5 wideLower risk, lower creditSmall accounts, conservative$10 wideBalancedMost traders$15+ wideHigher risk, more creditLarge accounts, aggressive

Standard approach: Use same width on both sides for symmetry.

Example:

  • Sell $95 put / Buy $90 put (5-wide)
  • Sell $110 call / Buy $115 call (5-wide)

Step 4: Choose Expiration

  • 30-45 DTE: Standard for most traders, ideal theta decay
  • 0-7 DTE: Maximum theta, extreme risk, daily income
  • 60+ DTE: More premium but slower decay

Recommended: 30-45 days for optimal balance.

Step 5: Execute the Trade

  1. Enter as a single order (all four legs at once)
  2. Select "Iron Condor"
  3. Use limit order on the net credit
  4. Example: Set limit at $2.10 if mid-price is $2.00

Risk and Reward Breakdown

Maximum Profit

Formula: Total net credit received

Example:

  • Put spread credit: $1.00 ($100)
  • Call spread credit: $1.00 ($100)
  • Max profit: $200

Occurs when: Stock closes between short strikes at expiration.

Maximum Loss

Formula: (Wing Width × 100) - Total Credit

Example:

  • Wing width: $5 ($500)
  • Total credit: $2.00 ($200)
  • Max loss: $300

Occurs when: Stock closes beyond either long strike (above $115 or below $90).

Key point: Only one side can lose at a time—stock can't be at both $85 and $120 simultaneously.

Breakeven Points

Lower breakeven: Lower short strike - total credit

Upper breakeven: Upper short strike + total credit

Example:

  • Sell $95 put / Sell $110 call
  • Collect $2.00 total credit
  • Lower breakeven: $93 ($95 - $2)
  • Upper breakeven: $112 ($110 + $2)

Profit range: Stock can be anywhere from $93 to $112.

Profit Zones Explained

Example: $90/$95/$110/$115 Iron Condor for $2.00 credit

Stock Price at ExpirationResultBelow $90Max loss: -$300 (put side)$90-$93Partial loss: -$300 to $0$93-$112Profit: $0 to +$200$95-$110Max profit: +$200$112-$115Partial loss: $0 to -$300Above $115Max loss: -$300 (call side)

Sweet spot: Stock closes between $95 and $110 = full $200 profit.

Real Trade Example

Setup: SPY Range-Bound After Earnings Season

  • SPY at $500, trading $495-$505 for 3 weeks
  • Earnings season over, low catalyst environment
  • VIX at 18, but IV Rank: 55 (elevated premiums)
  • Expected to consolidate before next move

Trade:

  • Sell $490 put / Buy $485 put = $0.90 credit
  • Sell $510 call / Buy $515 call = $0.90 credit
  • Total credit: $1.80 ($180)
  • Expiration: 35 DTE
  • Max profit: $180 | Max loss: $320
  • Profit range: $488.20 to $511.80
  • Position size: 3 condors ($960 max risk = 2% of $48k account)

Management:

  • Exit at 50% profit ($0.90 buyback)
  • Close if SPY breaks $490 or $510

Outcome:

  • Day 22: SPY at $502, range continues
  • Iron condor worth $0.40
  • Buy back at $0.40 = $140 profit per condor
  • Total: $420 profit (44% return on $960 risk)

Why exit early? Captured 78% of max profit with 13 days left, eliminated risk.

The Greeks: How They Affect Iron Condors

Delta: Near-Neutral Position

Iron condors have very low net delta (nearly market neutral).

Example:

  • Sell $95 put: +0.30 delta
  • Buy $90 put: -0.15 delta
  • Sell $110 call: -0.30 delta
  • Buy $115 call: +0.15 delta
  • Net delta: ~0

Meaning: Stock movement up or down has minimal impact initially.

Theta: Time Decay (YOUR BEST FRIEND)

Maximum advantage: Theta works hard for you with four short options.

Example:

  • Net theta: +0.12
  • Each day = $12 profit from decay alone
  • Stock does nothing for 30 days = $360 profit potential

Reality: Most of your profit comes from time decay, not direction.

Gamma: The Enemy Late in Expiration

Risk: Gamma accelerates against you as expiration approaches.

  • Early on: Gamma is low, safe
  • Final week: Gamma explodes, dangerous
  • One side can flip from safe to max loss rapidly

Management: Exit 7-10 days before expiration to avoid gamma risk.

Vega: Volatility Collapse (HELPS YOU)

Impact: You're a net seller, so falling IV profits you.

Strategy:

  • Enter when IV Rank high (50+)
  • Collect fat premiums
  • Profit as IV contracts back to normal

Example:

  • Enter at IV Rank 60 after market spike
  • IV drops to 30 over next 3 weeks
  • Iron condor gains value from vega collapse alone

Managing Iron Condors

Taking Profits Early

Profit Target Guidelines:

  • Standard: 50% of max credit
  • Conservative: 25% of max credit
  • Aggressive: 75% of max credit

Example:

  • Collected $200 credit
  • Condor now worth $80
  • Buy back for $80 = Keep $120 profit (60%)

Why exit at 50%? Last 50% of profit requires 80% of time and risk.

When One Side Gets Threatened

If stock approaches a short strike:

Option 1: Close Entire Condor

  • Take partial loss
  • Move on to better opportunity
  • Simplest approach

Option 2: Close Threatened Side Only

  • Close call spread if stock rising
  • Keep put spread to profit from decay
  • Reduces loss, keeps some profit potential

Option 3: Roll Threatened Side

  • Buy back threatened spread
  • Sell new spread further out
  • Collect additional credit
  • Only if thesis still valid

Example:

  • SPY approaching $510 call strike
  • Close $510/$515 call spread for $400 loss
  • Keep $490/$485 put spread
  • Net loss: $400 - $90 put credit = -$310

Adjustments vs. Taking Loss

Take the loss when:

  • Stock breaking out decisively
  • Technical level clearly broken
  • Better opportunities exist elsewhere

Adjust when:

  • Temporary spike within range
  • High conviction in range continuing
  • Time left to recover (15+ DTE)

Iron Condor Management Styles

Passive Management (Set and Forget)

Approach:

  • Set iron condor with wide strikes
  • Exit at 50% profit or max loss
  • No adjustments

Best for: Part-time traders, zero DTE strategies

Active Management (Constant Monitoring)

Approach:

  • Close threatened sides early
  • Roll strikes as needed
  • Take profits at 25-40%
  • Convert to other strategies (butterfly, etc.)

Best for: Full-time traders, larger positions

Mechanical Management (Rules-Based)

Approach:

  • Exit at 21 DTE regardless
  • Close at 50% profit always
  • Stop loss at 2x credit received
  • No discretion, pure rules

Best for: Systematic traders, backtested strategies

Zero DTE Iron Condors

Same-day expiration version:

Why Traders Love 0DTE Iron Condors

  • Collect premium in hours, not weeks
  • Maximum theta decay (exponential)
  • Can trade daily for income
  • Lower probability of breaking range intraday

0DTE Setup Example

SPY at $500 at 10 AM:

  • Sell $495 put / Buy $490 put = $0.50
  • Sell $505 call / Buy $510 call = $0.50
  • Total credit: $1.00 ($100)
  • Max loss: $400
  • Expiration: 4 PM same day

Management:

  • Exit at 50% ($0.50 buyback) by 2 PM
  • Close if SPY breaks $495 or $505
  • Never hold past 3:30 PM (gamma risk)

Risk: Power hour can see explosive moves. Always close before final 30 minutes.

0DTE Realistic Returns

Strategy:

  • Trade SPY/QQQ iron condors daily
  • Risk $400 to make $100 (25% ROI)
  • Win rate: 70-80% when done correctly
  • Monthly: ~15-20 trades × $100 = $1,500-$2,000 income
  • Bad months: 1-2 max losses wipe out weeks of gains

Position Sizing Strategy

Formula: (Account × 2%) ÷ Max Loss per Condor = Number of Condors

Examples:

Account SizeMax Risk (2%)Condor Max LossMax Condors$10,000$200$3000 (too wide)$25,000$500$3001$50,000$1,000$3003$100,000$2,000$3006

Diversification: Spread across multiple underlyings (SPY, QQQ, IWM).

Common Mistakes

1. Selling Strikes Too Close

❌ Stock at $100, selling $99 put and $101 call

✅ Touched almost immediately

Fix: Use at least 1 standard deviation (30 delta) for both sides

2. Holding for Max Profit

❌ Collected $200, worth $40, waiting for $0

✅ Risking $300 to make last $40

Fix: Always take 50% profit

3. Trading in Trending Markets

❌ Strong uptrend, selling iron condors

✅ Call side gets run over repeatedly

Fix: Only trade iron condors in range-bound markets

4. Ignoring IV Rank

❌ Selling condors when IV Rank at 10

✅ Collecting $50 for $300 risk (terrible)

Fix: Only trade iron condors when IV Rank >40

5. Holding Through Final Week

❌ Keeping positions with 5 DTE

✅ Gamma explodes, small move = max loss

Fix: Close all iron condors 7-10 days before expiration

Iron Condor vs. Other Strategies

StrategyCreditRiskDirectionalComplexityIron CondorMediumMediumNeutralMediumIron ButterflyHigherHigherVery neutralHighBull Put SpreadLowerLowerBullishLowStraddleZero (debit)HighVolatilityMediumCovered CallLowHighBullishLow

Iron condors balance: decent credit, manageable risk, wide profit range.

Market Conditions for Iron Condors

Best Markets

Post-Earnings Consolidation:

  • IV elevated from earnings
  • Stock digesting results
  • Range-bound for 2-4 weeks

Post-Fed/Economic Data:

  • Market reacts then consolidates
  • High IV slowly contracting
  • Waiting for next catalyst

Summer Doldrums:

  • Low volume, low movement
  • Market grinding sideways
  • Perfect for condors

Worst Markets

Leading Into Earnings:

  • IV rising but stock could gap
  • Too much event risk

During Crisis:

  • Wild intraday swings
  • Gaps through strikes
  • Correlations break down

Strong Trends:

  • Bull or bear markets
  • Condors get run over

Quick Setup Checklist

Before entering any iron condor:

✅ Stock range-bound for 2+ weeks

✅ IV Rank >40 (preferably 50+)

✅ No major catalysts for 30+ days

✅ Short strikes at support/resistance

✅ 5-10 wide spreads on both sides

✅ Expiration 30-45 DTE

✅ Exit plan at 50% profit

✅ Stop loss at 2x credit or technical break

✅ Position size ≤ 2% account risk

✅ Will close 7-10 days before expiration

Key Takeaways

  • Iron condors profit when stocks stay range-bound between your short strikes
  • Max profit = total credit | Max loss = (wing width - credit) × 100
  • Two breakevens: short put - credit and short call + credit
  • Four legs: sell put spread + sell call spread on same underlying
  • Theta decay is your primary profit driver—time works for you
  • Best in high IV environments (IV Rank >40) with no catalysts
  • Target 50% of max profit for optimal risk-reward
  • Exit 7-10 days before expiration to avoid gamma risk
  • Only trade in range-bound, consolidating markets
  • Can trade 0DTE for daily income but extreme risk

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an iron condor options strategy?

An iron condor is a neutral income strategy that simultaneously sells an OTM put spread and an OTM call spread on the same underlying and expiration. You collect a net credit for all four legs. The strategy profits when the stock stays between the two short strikes at expiration — both spreads expire worthless and you keep the full credit. Maximum loss is capped on both sides by the long options.

How do you calculate the max profit, max loss, and breakevens on an iron condor?

Max profit = total net credit received (both spreads). Max loss on either side = spread width − credit received from that spread. Upper breakeven = short call strike + net credit. Lower breakeven = short put strike − net credit. Example: sell $95 put spread + $105 call spread for $2 total credit → max profit = $2; lower breakeven = $95 − $2 = $93; upper breakeven = $105 + $2 = $107.

What is the ideal delta for the short strikes in an iron condor?

Most traders use a delta of 0.15–0.25 for each short strike, which gives approximately a 75–85% theoretical probability of expiring out of the money. Wider iron condors (lower delta short strikes) have a higher probability of profit but collect less premium. Narrower condors (higher delta) collect more but have a lower probability of success.

How does implied volatility affect an iron condor?

Iron condors are net short vega — they benefit from falling implied volatility after entry and are hurt by rising IV. The ideal time to enter is when IV rank (IVR) is above 30–40%. When IV drops after entry, the options you sold become cheaper to buy back, allowing you to close the position profitably before expiration. Never enter iron condors when IV is very low — the credit is too small to justify the risk.

What is the best way to manage an iron condor?

Close the iron condor at 50% of maximum profit — if you collected $2.00, close when you can buy it back for $1.00. This is the most research-supported management rule. If one side is threatened (stock approaches a short strike), you can roll that threatened spread to a wider strike for additional credit, or simply close the entire position to limit losses. Avoid holding to expiration — gamma risk increases sharply in the final week.

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