Options riskIntermediate

Theta Risk

Theta risk is the exposure of an options position to the passage of time, the daily erosion of extrinsic value that steadily drains a buyer's premium and lures a seller into carrying open-ended risk for a small, decaying reward.

Quick answer: Theta risk is the exposure of an options position to the passage of time, the daily erosion of extrinsic value that steadily drains a buyer's premium and lures a seller into carrying open-ended risk for a small, decaying reward.

In simple words

An option is partly a wasting asset: some of its price is time value that melts away as expiry approaches, and theta measures how much per day. For a buyer, theta is a headwind, the position loses value every day the underlying does not move enough. For a seller, theta is income, but it is small and comes with the risk of a large loss if the market moves. Theta risk is the danger of being on the wrong side of this clock: paying decay while waiting, or collecting decay while exposed to a move that dwarfs it.

Purpose

This page treats time decay as a risk to be managed on both sides, showing how theta drains long premium and how it tempts sellers into open-ended exposure, rather than teaching how theta is derived.

Professional explanation

Theta is the daily bleed of time value

An option's price has intrinsic value and extrinsic (time) value, and theta measures the rupee amount of extrinsic value lost per day as expiry nears, all else equal. For a buyer this is a constant drag: even if the underlying does not move against you, the option loses value each day, so you need the move to arrive fast enough to outpace decay. For a seller it is the reverse, a daily credit to the position. Theta risk is the exposure to this passage of time, and the first step in managing it is to know the rupee amount of decay your book gains or loses each day.

Decay is not linear: it accelerates near expiry

Time value does not erode evenly; it decays slowly when expiry is distant and accelerates sharply in the final days, roughly in proportion to the square root of the time remaining. An at-the-money option loses most of its time value in the last week and a large part of that in the final day. For NSE weekly options this means the whole decay curve is compressed into a few days, so a buyer of a weekly option faces brutal decay and a seller collects it fast but with the gamma risk that also peaks then. Understanding the shape of decay, not just its current rate, is essential to timing entries and exits.

The buyer's dilemma: paying for time and direction

A long option needs two things to go right: the underlying must move enough, and it must move soon enough, because theta charges rent for every day held. This is why a directional view can be correct yet still lose money, if the move takes too long to arrive. The buyer's theta risk is therefore the risk of being right too slowly, and it is worst for at-the-money weekly options where decay is fastest. Managing it means not overpaying for time, choosing expiries that give the thesis room, and treating the premium as a wasting budget rather than a stable stake.

The seller's temptation: small reward, open-ended risk

Selling options to collect theta feels like earning a steady income, and on most days it is. The danger is that the reward is small and bounded while the risk from an adverse move is large and, for a naked short, unbounded. A seller is short gamma as the price of being long theta, so the same position that drips in daily decay can lose many days of it in a single sharp move. Theta risk for a seller is thus the illusion of safety: a high win rate and smooth equity curve that hide a payoff where one loss erases weeks of collected decay. The decay is real income, but it is rent for carrying tail risk.

Controlling theta risk on both sides

For buyers, the controls are choosing sufficient time to expiry so decay is gentler, sizing the premium as the full risk budget since it can all be lost, and avoiding the temptation to hold a decaying option in hope. For sellers, the controls are sizing off the potential adverse move rather than the premium collected, using defined-risk spreads so the theta comes with a capped loss, and not confusing a run of decay income with a durable edge. On both sides the discipline is to weigh the daily theta against the gamma and vega risk carried alongside it, because time decay is never free of the market risk that funds or opposes it.

Formula

Daily decay ≈ theta × lots × lot size; theta is negative for a long option (a loss) and positive for a short option (a credit)

Theta = the per-unit change in option value for one day passing, in rupees; lots = number of lots; lot size = units per lot (Nifty 75). The product is the position's rupee value lost (long) or gained (short) per day from time alone, holding the underlying and volatility constant. Because decay accelerates near expiry, theta itself grows in magnitude as expiry approaches for at-the-money options, so today's figure understates the coming days' decay.

Theta for the buyer vs the seller

AspectOption buyer (long)Option seller (short)
Theta signNegative, a daily costPositive, a daily credit
What it needsA move soon, before decay winsThe underlying to stay put
Reward shapeLarge if right and fastSmall and capped at premium
Risk shapeCapped at premium paidLarge or unbounded on a move
Hidden trapBeing right too slowlySmooth income hiding tail risk

Practical example

Illustrative example (Indian market)

A trader buys 4 lots of a Nifty weekly at-the-money call near 25,000 for Rs 120 per unit, lot size 75, so the premium outlay is 120 × 4 × 75 = Rs 36,000. With four days to expiry the option's theta is about −8 per unit, so the daily decay is roughly 8 × 4 × 75 = Rs 2,400 lost per day even if Nifty is flat. Over three quiet days that is about Rs 7,200, a fifth of the premium gone with no adverse move at all, and the decay accelerates on the last day. The trader is right that the premium is the maximum loss, but theta means the position bleeds toward that maximum daily, so the directional move must arrive quickly; a correct view that plays out a day late can still lose money.

NSE weekly expiries compress the entire decay curve into a few days, so at-the-money weekly buyers face severe theta while sellers collect it fast, but with peak gamma. A seller collecting Rs 2,400 a day of theta on the same strike can lose several days of it in one 100-point move, which is the trade-off that makes weekly premium selling feel safe until it is not.

Limitations

  • Quoted theta is a one-day snapshot that changes as expiry nears and as volatility moves
  • Theta assumes the underlying and implied volatility are unchanged, which they rarely are
  • A drop in implied volatility can overwhelm theta income for a seller on a single day
  • Theta says nothing about the gamma and vega risk carried alongside the decay
  • Decay is fastest at the money; for deep in or out of the money options theta is small and less informative

Common mistakes

  • Buying short-dated at-the-money options and underestimating how fast they decay
  • Holding a losing long option in hope while theta drains it every day
  • Selling options for the daily theta while sizing off premium instead of the adverse move
  • Reading a smooth stream of decay income as a durable edge rather than rent for tail risk
  • Ignoring that theta accelerates into expiry, so the last days cost far more than the first
  • Forgetting that a volatility drop can erase a seller's theta gain on the same day

Professional usage

Desks track net theta as the daily carry of the book and weigh it explicitly against the gamma and vega it funds or opposes. Sellers size positions against a plausible adverse move rather than the premium, prefer defined-risk structures so the decay income comes with a capped loss, and treat theta as compensation for short gamma rather than a standalone return. Buyers choose enough time to expiry that decay does not overwhelm the thesis and budget the premium as fully at risk.

Key takeaways

  • Theta is the daily erosion of an option's time value; buyers pay it and sellers collect it
  • Daily decay ≈ theta × lots × lot size, and it accelerates into expiry
  • A buyer can be right on direction yet lose to being right too slowly
  • A seller's steady theta is rent for open-ended risk, so size off the move, not the premium

Frequently asked questions

What is theta risk?
Theta risk is a position's exposure to the passage of time, the daily erosion of an option's extrinsic value. For a buyer it is a constant cost that drains the premium; for a seller it is income that comes bundled with the risk of a large loss on a move.
How much does an option lose per day from theta?
Approximately theta times lots times lot size. If theta is −8 per unit on a Nifty option with lot size 75, four lots lose about 8 × 4 × 75 = Rs 2,400 per day from time alone, holding the underlying and volatility constant.
Why does an option lose value even when the underlying does not move?
Because part of its price is time value, which decays as expiry approaches regardless of the underlying. That daily loss is theta, so a long option bleeds value each quiet day and needs the underlying to move enough to offset the decay.
Does time decay happen evenly?
No. Decay accelerates as expiry nears, roughly with the square root of remaining time, so an at-the-money option loses most of its time value in the final week and a large part on the last day. Weekly options compress this into a few days.
How does theta hurt option buyers?
It charges daily rent on the position, so a buyer must be right on direction and on timing. A correct view that takes too long to play out can still lose money, because decay erodes the premium while you wait, which is worst for short-dated at-the-money options.
Is selling options for theta a safe income?
It feels safe because most days it collects decay, but the reward is small and capped while the risk from a move is large or unbounded. The seller is short gamma as the price of the theta, so one sharp move can erase many days of income.
How do I manage theta risk as a buyer?
Choose enough time to expiry that decay is gentler, avoid overpaying for at-the-money time value, size the premium as your full risk budget, and do not hold a decaying option merely in hope. The premium is a wasting stake, so timing matters as much as direction.
How do I manage theta risk as a seller?
Size the position against a plausible adverse move rather than the premium collected, use defined-risk spreads so the decay comes with a capped loss, and treat the theta as compensation for short gamma. Never confuse a smooth run of decay income with a durable edge.
How is theta related to gamma?
They are linked by the same trade-off: a position that is long theta is short gamma and vice versa. A seller collects daily decay in exchange for the convex risk that a sharp move will hurt them, so the theta is effectively rent for carrying gamma risk.
Why is weekly expiry decay so severe?
Because the whole decay curve is compressed into a few days, so an at-the-money weekly option loses time value very fast. Buyers face brutal decay and sellers collect it quickly, but with the peak gamma risk that also concentrates near weekly expiry.
Can theta income be wiped out in one day?
Yes. A single adverse move can cost a seller several days of collected theta at once through gamma, and a jump in implied volatility can also overwhelm the day's theta through vega. The steady drip of decay is easily undone by a market move.
Does theta depend on where the option is relative to the strike?
Yes. Theta is largest for at-the-money options and smaller for deep in-the-money or out-of-the-money ones, because at-the-money options carry the most time value to decay. This is why at-the-money weekly options have the harshest decay for buyers.
Should I always avoid buying options because of theta?
No. Buying options gives defined, capped risk and positive gamma, which is valuable for a fast or uncertain move. The point is to respect theta by not overpaying for time and by ensuring the expected move can plausibly arrive before decay erodes the premium.
How does volatility interact with theta?
Higher implied volatility raises an option's time value, so there is more to decay and theta is larger in rupee terms. A fall in implied volatility can hand a seller a gain beyond theta, while a rise can hand a loss that overwhelms the day's decay, so theta and vega must be read together.
Is theta the same as the option's total daily change?
No. Theta is only the time-decay component. The option's actual daily change also reflects the underlying's move through delta and gamma and any change in implied volatility through vega, so on most days those effects dominate the pure theta figure.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Theta Risk.

What is theta risk?
It is the risk from time passing. Options lose their time value every day, so buyers pay this decay while sellers collect it. Being on the wrong side of the clock costs you.
Why is my option losing money when the market is flat?
That is time decay. Part of the option's price is time value, and it melts away each day whether or not the underlying moves. Theta measures how much you lose daily.
Is selling options a safe way to earn income?
It feels safe because you collect a little each day, but the reward is small and the risk from a sharp move is big. One bad move can take back weeks of income.
When does time decay hurt the most?
In the last few days before expiry, especially for at-the-money weekly options. That is when the time value drains fastest, so a buyer feels it the most.
Can I be right about direction and still lose?
Yes. If the move takes too long, decay eats your option before the move arrives. With options you have to be right on direction and on timing.
How do I lower theta risk when buying options?
Give yourself enough time to expiry, do not overpay for at-the-money options, and treat the premium as money you could fully lose. Timing matters as much as your view.

Sources & references

    Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.

    Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and simplified models. Risk-management techniques reduce but never remove risk, and trading derivatives involves substantial risk of loss. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.