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:
An iron condor consists of four options creating two credit spreads:
Put Spread (Lower Side):
Call Spread (Upper Side):
You build "walls" on both sides. As long as price stays between your short strikes, you keep all premium.
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)
Look for:
Example: Stock trading between $95 and $105 for 3 weeks, currently at $100.
Put side (lower):
Call side (upper):
Example: Stock at $100
Probability: 30 delta = roughly 70% chance of expiring OTM.
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:
Recommended: 30-45 days for optimal balance.
Formula: Total net credit received
Example:
Occurs when: Stock closes between short strikes at expiration.
Formula: (Wing Width × 100) - Total Credit
Example:
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.
Lower breakeven: Lower short strike - total credit
Upper breakeven: Upper short strike + total credit
Example:
Profit range: Stock can be anywhere from $93 to $112.
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.
Setup: SPY Range-Bound After Earnings Season
Trade:
Management:
Outcome:
Why exit early? Captured 78% of max profit with 13 days left, eliminated risk.
Iron condors have very low net delta (nearly market neutral).
Example:
Meaning: Stock movement up or down has minimal impact initially.
Maximum advantage: Theta works hard for you with four short options.
Example:
Reality: Most of your profit comes from time decay, not direction.
Risk: Gamma accelerates against you as expiration approaches.
Management: Exit 7-10 days before expiration to avoid gamma risk.
Impact: You're a net seller, so falling IV profits you.
Strategy:
Example:
Profit Target Guidelines:
Example:
Why exit at 50%? Last 50% of profit requires 80% of time and risk.
If stock approaches a short strike:
Option 1: Close Entire Condor
Option 2: Close Threatened Side Only
Option 3: Roll Threatened Side
Example:
Take the loss when:
Adjust when:
Approach:
Best for: Part-time traders, zero DTE strategies
Approach:
Best for: Full-time traders, larger positions
Approach:
Best for: Systematic traders, backtested strategies
Same-day expiration version:
SPY at $500 at 10 AM:
Management:
Risk: Power hour can see explosive moves. Always close before final 30 minutes.
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).
❌ Stock at $100, selling $99 put and $101 call
✅ Touched almost immediately
Fix: Use at least 1 standard deviation (30 delta) for both sides
❌ Collected $200, worth $40, waiting for $0
✅ Risking $300 to make last $40
Fix: Always take 50% profit
❌ Strong uptrend, selling iron condors
✅ Call side gets run over repeatedly
Fix: Only trade iron condors in range-bound markets
❌ Selling condors when IV Rank at 10
✅ Collecting $50 for $300 risk (terrible)
Fix: Only trade iron condors when IV Rank >40
❌ Keeping positions with 5 DTE
✅ Gamma explodes, small move = max loss
Fix: Close all iron condors 7-10 days before expiration
StrategyCreditRiskDirectionalComplexityIron CondorMediumMediumNeutralMediumIron ButterflyHigherHigherVery neutralHighBull Put SpreadLowerLowerBullishLowStraddleZero (debit)HighVolatilityMediumCovered CallLowHighBullishLow
Iron condors balance: decent credit, manageable risk, wide profit range.
Post-Earnings Consolidation:
Post-Fed/Economic Data:
Summer Doldrums:
Leading Into Earnings:
During Crisis:
Strong Trends:
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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