The bear put spread — also called a put debit spread — is a vertical options strategy that profits when the underlying stock declines moderately. By buying a higher-strike put option and selling a lower-strike put with the same expiration, you pay a net debit upfront and define both your maximum risk and maximum reward. This guide covers the strategy mechanics, payoff formulas, a worked example with AAPL, and when to use a bear put spread in your trading.

What Is a Bear Put Spread?

A bear put spread is a bearish options strategy that uses two put options to create a position with defined risk and defined reward. You buy a put at a higher strike price and simultaneously sell a put at a lower strike price, both with the same expiration date. The result is a net debit — you pay more for the long put than you receive from the short put.

Key Concept

A bear put spread involves buying a higher-strike put and selling a lower-strike put with the same expiration. You pay a net debit to enter the trade. The strategy profits when the underlying stock declines moderately, with both maximum profit and maximum loss strictly defined at entry.

The bear put spread is also known as a long put spread or put debit spread. It belongs to the family of vertical spreads — strategies that combine two options of the same type (both puts or both calls) with different strike prices but the same expiration.

How a Bear Put Spread Works

Setting up a bear put spread involves two simultaneous transactions:

  1. Buy a higher-strike put (typically at-the-money or slightly in-the-money) — this is your long leg, which gains value as the stock declines.
  2. Sell a lower-strike put (out-of-the-money) — this is your short leg, which offsets part of the long put’s cost but caps your maximum profit.
  3. Pay the net debit — the difference between the premium paid for the long put and the premium received from the short put. This is your maximum possible loss.
  4. Profit if the stock falls below breakeven — the position increases in value as the stock declines toward or below the lower strike price.

The spread has a net negative delta, meaning it gains value when the underlying stock price falls. Selling the lower-strike put reduces your upfront cost compared to buying a put outright, but it also limits your profit to the width of the spread minus the debit paid.

Video: Bear Put Spread: Strategy & Profits

Bear Put Spread Payoff: Max Profit, Max Loss & Breakeven

The bear put spread has clearly defined payoff boundaries. All formulas below are calculated at expiration and exclude commissions and slippage.

Maximum Profit
Max Profit = (Higher Strike − Lower Strike) − Net Premium Paid
Achieved when the stock is at or below the lower strike at expiration — both puts are in the money and the spread reaches its full width
Maximum Loss
Max Loss = Net Premium Paid
Occurs when the stock is at or above the higher strike at expiration — both puts expire worthless and you lose the entire debit
Breakeven Price
Breakeven = Higher Strike − Net Premium Paid
The stock price at which the long put’s intrinsic value exactly offsets the net debit paid

As a debit spread, time decay (theta) works against this position. The spread loses value as expiration approaches, particularly when both legs are out of the money and the stock hasn’t moved below the breakeven price.

Bear Put Spread Example

AAPL Bear Put Spread

AAPL is trading at $187. You are moderately bearish and expect the stock to pull back toward $175 over the next month.

  • Buy 1 AAPL $185 put at $7.00 per share
  • Sell 1 AAPL $175 put at $3.00 per share
  • Net Debit: $7.00 − $3.00 = $4.00 per share ($400 per contract)

Key Levels:

  • Max Profit: ($185 − $175) − $4.00 = $6.00 per share ($600 per contract)
  • Max Loss: $4.00 per share ($400 per contract)
  • Breakeven: $185 − $4.00 = $181.00
AAPL at Expiration Long $185 Put Value Short $175 Put Value Spread Value Profit / Loss
$170 (below both strikes) $15.00 −$5.00 $10.00 +$6.00 ($600)
$180 (between strikes) $5.00 $0.00 $5.00 +$1.00 ($100)
$190 (above both strikes) $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 −$4.00 ($400)
Pro Tip

Compare the $400 maximum risk of this bear put spread to buying the $185 put alone for $700. The spread cuts your upfront cost by 43% while still offering $600 in profit potential. The trade-off is that your profit is capped — if AAPL drops to $160, the spread still earns $600, while the long put alone would earn $1,800.

Bear Put Spread vs Bear Call Spread

Both the bear put spread and the bear call spread profit from bearish or declining stock prices, but they use different mechanics and have distinct risk profiles.

Bear Put Spread

  • Debit spread — you pay premium upfront
  • Uses put options
  • Profits when stock declines below breakeven
  • Time decay works against you
  • Requires the stock to actually move down
  • Preferred when implied volatility is low

Bear Call Spread

  • Credit spread — you collect premium upfront
  • Uses call options
  • Profits when stock stays below short call strike
  • Time decay works in your favor
  • Can profit if stock stays flat or declines
  • Preferred when implied volatility is high

Choose the bear put spread when you have a directional conviction that the stock will decline. Choose the bear call spread when you want time decay working in your favor and are comfortable profiting from the stock simply staying below a resistance level.

Bear Put Spread vs Long Put

Since many traders consider a bear put spread as an alternative to buying a put outright, it helps to compare the two directly using the AAPL example above:

Feature Bear Put Spread ($185/$175) Long $185 Put
Cost (Max Loss) $4.00 ($400) $7.00 ($700)
Max Profit $6.00 ($600) $178.00 ($17,800) if stock → $0
Breakeven $181.00 $178.00
Best For Moderate decline expected Large decline expected or no profit cap desired

The bear put spread is cheaper and has a closer breakeven, making it easier to reach profitability. However, the long put captures far more profit in a large sell-off. Choose based on how far you expect the stock to fall.

When to Use a Bear Put Spread

The bear put spread is most effective in these situations:

  • Moderately bearish outlook — you expect the stock to decline but not collapse
  • Want a cheaper alternative to buying a put — the short put offsets part of the premium cost
  • Prefer defined risk — your maximum loss is known at entry (the net debit paid)
  • Have a specific downside target — set the lower strike near your expected price target to maximize the risk/reward ratio
  • Implied volatility is relatively low — debit spreads are preferable when options are cheap; credit spreads work better when IV is elevated
  • Liquid option chains available — choose strikes with tight bid-ask spreads and high open interest to minimize execution costs

Learn more about vertical spreads and when to apply each one in the Options Trading Strategies course.

Common Mistakes

Avoid these common errors when trading bear put spreads:

1. Choosing strikes too far apart. Widening the spread increases maximum profit, but it also increases your net debit. Beyond a certain width, the additional profit potential is not worth the extra cost because the stock must fall further to achieve maximum profit. Match the spread width to your realistic downside target.

2. Not factoring the breakeven level into your trade thesis. The stock must drop below the higher strike minus the debit paid — not just decline a little. If your bearish target is above the breakeven price, the trade will likely lose money. Always calculate the breakeven before entering.

3. Holding near expiration when the short put is deep in the money. Assignment risk increases when the short put has little extrinsic value remaining and is deep ITM near expiration. Consider closing the spread early to capture most of the profit and avoid the complications of being assigned on the short leg.

4. Using a bear put spread when strongly bearish. If you expect a large decline, a long put captures far more profit — the maximum gain is the strike price minus the premium paid (achieved if the stock goes to zero). The bear put spread caps your gains at the spread width, so it underperforms in a significant sell-off.

Risks and Limitations

Important Limitation

Unlike buying a put outright, the bear put spread caps your profit. If the stock plunges well below the lower strike, you will not benefit beyond the spread width. Your maximum profit is the spread width minus the debit paid, regardless of how far the stock falls.

Time decay works against you. As a net debit position, the bear put spread loses value as expiration approaches, especially when both legs are out of the money. If the stock hasn’t declined past your breakeven, theta erosion will steadily reduce the spread’s value.

Early assignment risk on the short put. The short put (lower strike) can be assigned early on American-style options, particularly when it moves deep in the money and has very little extrinsic value remaining near expiration. While assignment doesn’t change your maximum loss, it can create temporary capital and margin complications.

The stock must actually decline. Unlike a bear call spread — which can profit from the stock simply staying flat — the bear put spread requires a meaningful downward move past the breakeven price. If the stock stays at or above the higher strike at expiration, you lose the entire debit paid. Even a modest decline that doesn’t reach breakeven results in a partial loss. If you want a bearish position where time decay works in your favor, consider the bear call spread instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

A bear put spread costs less than a long put because the short lower-strike put offsets part of the premium. In the AAPL example above, the spread costs $400 versus $700 for the long put alone. However, the trade-off is capped profit — the spread maxes out at $600 regardless of how far AAPL falls, while the long put could earn up to $17,800 (if AAPL went to $0). Use a bear put spread for moderate declines and a long put when you expect a large drop or want no cap on your gains.

Select the higher strike near the current stock price (at-the-money) or slightly in-the-money for a higher probability of profit. The lower strike should be near your bearish price target — this is where the spread reaches maximum profit. A narrower spread costs less but offers a lower maximum profit. A wider spread costs more but captures a larger portion of a downside move. Also consider liquidity: choose strikes with tight bid-ask spreads and high open interest to minimize execution costs.

Consider closing early when the spread has captured 70-80% of its maximum profit, when your bearish thesis has changed (for example, the stock found support), or when the short put is deep in the money near expiration and you want to avoid assignment risk. Closing early also eliminates remaining time decay risk and frees up your capital for other trades.

Yes, early assignment is possible on American-style options. It is most likely when the short put is deep in the money and has very little extrinsic value remaining, typically close to expiration. If assigned, you are obligated to buy 100 shares at the short put’s strike price. Your long put still protects you — you can exercise it or sell it to offset the position. While early assignment doesn’t increase your maximum loss, it can temporarily tie up additional capital and create margin requirements until you close the remaining leg.

Disclaimer

This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Options trading involves significant risk and is not suitable for all investors. The example uses approximate option prices for illustration. Always conduct your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.