Strangle Options Strategy: Long and Short Strangles Explained
The strangle options strategy is an out-of-the-money volatility play that costs less than a straddle but requires a larger price move to reach profitability. Instead of buying options at the current stock price, a strangle uses an OTM call above the market and an OTM put below it — same expiration, different strikes. This guide covers both long and short strangles, their payoff profiles, breakeven mechanics, and when each version makes sense.
What Are Strangle Options?
A strangle involves buying or selling both an out-of-the-money call and an out-of-the-money put on the same underlying asset with the same expiration date but different strike prices. The call strike is set above the current stock price and the put strike below it. Because both options are OTM, a strangle costs less than an at-the-money straddle on the same stock.
The trade-off for the lower cost is wider breakeven points. The stock must make a larger move in either direction before the position becomes profitable. This makes the strangle a cheaper but higher-hurdle alternative to the straddle for traders who expect significant volatility.
Like the straddle, a strangle starts approximately delta-neutral — it has no directional bias at entry. Profit or loss depends on the magnitude of the stock’s move, not the direction. The position’s sensitivity to volatility changes is driven by vega, while theta (time decay) works against the long strangle holder.
Long Strangle vs Short Strangle
Long Strangle
To open a long strangle, you simultaneously:
- Buy 1 OTM call above the current stock price
- Buy 1 OTM put below the current stock price
You pay premium on both legs — the total cost is the call premium plus the put premium. This is your maximum risk. If the stock makes a large move in either direction, one leg gains intrinsic value while the other expires worthless. For the trade to profit at expiration, the stock must move beyond one of the two breakeven points.
Long strangles are often used around binary events — earnings, FDA rulings, or economic reports — where the trader expects a large move but cannot predict the direction. Event-driven long strangles typically use front-month or weekly expirations to minimize time premium paid.
Short Strangle
A short strangle is the opposite. You simultaneously:
- Sell 1 OTM call above the current stock price
- Sell 1 OTM put below the current stock price
You collect premium on both legs — this is your maximum profit. If the stock stays between the two strikes through expiration, both options expire worthless and you keep the full premium. However, if the stock moves sharply beyond either breakeven, losses can be very large — theoretically unlimited on the call side.
Short premium sellers typically target 30-45 days to expiration (DTE), where theta decay accelerates while still providing enough premium to collect. Short strangles benefit from declining implied volatility and the passage of time.
Strangle Payoff Diagram
All payoff formulas below describe outcomes at expiration for equity options (where the stock price cannot fall below zero).
Long Strangle Payoff
Short Strangle Payoff
Strangle Example
Setup: Apple (AAPL) is trading at $180. You expect a large move after an upcoming earnings report but are unsure of the direction. You buy 1 AAPL $185 call at $3.00 and 1 AAPL $175 put at $2.50.
Key levels:
- Total premium = $3.00 + $2.50 = $5.50 per share ($550 per contract)
- Upper breakeven = $185 + $5.50 = $190.50
- Lower breakeven = $175 – $5.50 = $169.50
- Max loss = $5.50 per share = $550 (if AAPL closes between $175 and $185)
| Scenario | AAPL Price | Call Value | Put Value | Net P&L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stock rallies | $195 | $10.00 | $0.00 | +$4.50 (+$450) |
| Upper breakeven | $190.50 | $5.50 | $0.00 | $0 |
| Stock flat (max loss) | $180 | $0.00 | $0.00 | -$5.50 (-$550) |
| Lower breakeven | $169.50 | $0.00 | $5.50 | $0 |
| Stock drops | $165 | $0.00 | $10.00 | +$4.50 (+$450) |
Compare this to an ATM straddle on the same stock: the straddle would cost roughly $10.00 with breakevens at $170 and $190. The strangle costs $5.50 — nearly half the capital at risk — but the breakevens are wider ($169.50 and $190.50), requiring a bigger move to profit.
Short Strangle: Post-Earnings IV Crush
Now consider the seller’s perspective. You sell the same AAPL $185 call / $175 put strangle for $5.50 total premium before earnings. After the announcement, AAPL moves to $183 — a modest $3 move that stays well within the breakevens. More importantly, implied volatility drops roughly 40% as the uncertainty resolves.
The combined extrinsic value of both options collapses. You can close the strangle for approximately $2.00, netting about $3.50 per share ($350) in profit — even though the stock moved. This illustrates the core dynamic of short strangles: they profit primarily from volatility contraction, not just from the stock standing still.
Strangle vs Straddle
Strangles and straddles are both volatility strategies, but they differ in strike placement and cost structure:
Strangle
- OTM strikes — call above, put below current price
- Lower premium cost ($5.50 in our example)
- Wider breakeven range ($169.50 – $190.50)
- Needs a larger move to reach profitability
- Less capital at risk per contract
Straddle
- ATM strikes — same strike for both call and put
- Higher premium cost (~$10.00 on same stock)
- Narrower breakeven range ($170 – $190)
- Higher probability of some payout at expiration
- More capital at risk per contract
The choice often comes down to cost sensitivity versus probability of profit. A strangle costs less but demands a bigger move. A straddle costs more but starts profiting sooner because the strikes are at the money. For a complete guide to straddle mechanics and when to use them, see our straddle strategy article.
How to Structure and Manage a Strangle
Strike Selection
Distance from ATM: The further out-of-the-money you place the strikes, the cheaper the strangle but the larger the move required. Typical long strangles use strikes $5–$10 OTM on a $150–$200 stock. Short strangle sellers often use delta-based selection to standardize their strike placement across different underlyings.
A popular short strangle framework is the 16-delta strangle — selling options at approximately 16 delta on each side. This is an approximate heuristic corresponding to roughly one standard deviation OTM, meaning each option has about a 16% probability of expiring in-the-money. The result is approximately a 68% chance that both options expire worthless — though skew and term structure can shift the actual probability. It balances premium collection with a reasonable probability of success.
Liquidity check: Before entering any strangle, verify that both strikes have adequate open interest and tight bid-ask spreads. Illiquid strikes can cost you significantly on entry and exit.
Trade Management
Long strangles: If you entered before a specific catalyst (earnings, FDA decision), close the position shortly after the event resolves — win or lose. Holding after the catalyst exposes you to accelerating theta decay with no remaining trigger for a large move. If one leg goes deep in-the-money, consider closing that leg to lock in profit while the other leg retains some residual value. Set a time stop: if the expected move has not materialized within a few days, exit rather than hoping.
Short strangles: Many short strangle traders close at 50% of maximum profit rather than holding to expiration — this captures most of the profit while avoiding the gamma risk that accelerates near expiry. If the stock moves against one side (the “tested” side), consider rolling the untested side closer to the current price to collect additional premium and reduce the position’s breakeven. Monitor implied volatility — a spike in IV increases the cost of closing the position even if the stock hasn’t moved beyond the breakevens.
When to Use a Strangle
- Before binary events: Earnings reports, regulatory decisions, and economic releases can drive large moves. A long strangle captures the move regardless of direction — but only if it exceeds the premium paid
- When a straddle is too expensive: If ATM premiums are high, the strangle provides similar volatility exposure for less capital. This is especially relevant during elevated IV environments where the straddle cost creates a very high breakeven hurdle
- Uncertain direction with conviction about magnitude: If you believe the stock must move significantly but genuinely cannot predict which way, a strangle removes the need to call direction
- Diversified volatility portfolio: Some traders sell strangles across multiple uncorrelated underlyings to build a diversified short-premium portfolio. The idea is that individual large moves are offset by premium collection across the broader portfolio
Explore more volatility and hedging strategies in our Options Trading Strategies course.
Common Mistakes
1. Buying strikes too far out-of-the-money. Extremely OTM strangles are cheap for a reason — the stock needs an enormous move to reach profitability. A $5 strangle on strikes 15% away from the current price may seem like a bargain, but the implied probability of the stock moving that far is very low. Cheaper is not always better.
2. Ignoring theta decay. A long strangle has negative theta on both legs. Every day that passes without a significant move reduces the position’s value. This effect accelerates as expiration approaches. If you buy a strangle two weeks before earnings, most of the time value can erode before the event even arrives.
3. Selling strangles without understanding tail risk. Short strangles have theoretically unlimited loss on the call side and very large loss potential on the put side. A single tail event — an unexpected earnings disaster, a sudden market crash, or a surprise takeover bid — can generate losses many multiples of the premium collected. Never sell strangles without a clear risk management plan.
4. Not sizing positions for the risk. Short strangles require margin, and the margin requirement can increase sharply if the stock moves against you. Size positions so that a worst-case move on any single strangle does not materially impair your portfolio. Many experienced traders risk no more than 1–3% of total capital on any single short strangle.
5. Entering illiquid strikes. Wide bid-ask spreads and low open interest at your chosen strikes increase execution costs and make it harder to adjust or close the position when needed. Always check liquidity before entering — especially on both legs simultaneously.
Risks and Limitations
A long strangle has a wider “dead zone” than a straddle — the range of stock prices between the two breakevens where the position loses money at expiration. Because both options start out-of-the-money, the stock must move further before either leg gains enough intrinsic value to cover the total premium paid.
Long strangles need very large moves to profit. The stock must travel beyond one of the two breakeven points at expiration. A moderate move that would profit a straddle may still result in a full loss for the strangle holder.
Short strangles carry unlimited upside risk. If the stock rallies sharply past the upper breakeven, losses on the short call are theoretically unbounded. On the downside, losses are large but capped (the stock cannot fall below zero). Short strangles require significant margin and demand active management.
IV crush can negate stock movement. After a catalyst like earnings, implied volatility often drops sharply. For long strangle holders, this collapse in IV can reduce option prices enough to offset gains from the stock moving — particularly if the move is moderate rather than large.
Early assignment risk. American-style equity options can be exercised before expiration. Short call sellers face assignment risk when the stock approaches an ex-dividend date, as call holders may exercise early to capture the dividend. Short put sellers can also be assigned early if the put moves deep in-the-money, though this is less common. Early assignment on either leg disrupts the strangle structure and may require immediate action to manage the resulting stock position.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. The examples use hypothetical scenarios for illustration; actual results will vary based on market conditions, commissions, and other factors. Consult a qualified financial advisor before trading options.