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Calculate exact profit, loss, breakeven price and ROI for any call or put option trade. Works for NSE, BSE, NYSE and all major global markets with live currency conversion.
Call / Put ยท Long / Short ยท Multi-currency ยท Breakeven & Max Loss/Profit
Find out if you're saving enough to retire comfortably. Input your age, income, savings rate, and expected return โ get a full retirement gap analysis with chart projections.
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Try EMI Calculator โA few years ago, a friend of mine bought a Nifty call option for โน120 a unit. Two weeks later, it was worth โน480. He had put in about โน6,000 and walked away with โน24,000. He told me it was "easy money." What he didn't tell me was about the three times before that when those same โน6,000 expired completely worthless. That story captures everything about options โ the thrill, the math, and the lessons learned the expensive way.
An option is a contract that gives you the right โ but not the obligation โ to buy or sell an underlying asset at a specific price (called the strike price) on or before a specific date (the expiry). You pay a small upfront fee for this right, called the premium. The asset could be a stock, an index like Nifty or Sensex, or commodities like gold and crude oil.
There are only two kinds: a Call option gives you the right to buy. A Put option gives you the right to sell. Think of a call as a bet that the price will go up, and a put as a bet that it will go down โ but with a defined, limited risk if you're the buyer.
"Options are not gambling tools. They're precision instruments โ like a scalpel. In the wrong hands, they're dangerous. In trained hands, they're incredibly powerful."
Say Nifty is trading at 18,000. You believe it will rise to 18,500 before expiry. You buy a Call option with a strike price of 18,000 at a premium of โน150 per unit. The lot size is 50 units, so your total cost is โน7,500.
This is exactly what our calculator computes โ breakeven, gross P&L, net P&L after brokerage, ROI, and the full payoff chart across a range of expiry prices.
Put options are useful when you expect a price decline or want to protect an existing position. You buy a Put at strike 18,000 for โน130. If the market falls to 17,500, your profit is (โน500 โ โน130) ร lot size. If it stays above 18,000, you lose only your premium โ the โน130 per unit you paid.
Puts are also used as insurance. If you hold shares worth โน5 lakh, you can buy a put option that pays off if those shares fall significantly. Think of it as car insurance โ you hope you never need it, but you're glad it's there.
๐ก The ITM / ATM / OTM Framework: In-The-Money (ITM) = intrinsic value exists right now. At-The-Money (ATM) = strike equals current price. Out-of-The-Money (OTM) = no intrinsic value yet, only time value. Beginners should generally stick to ATM or slightly ITM options for cleaner P&L behaviour.
Every option buyer has a seller on the other side. When you sell (write) a call or put, you collect the premium upfront. This sounds great โ you get paid immediately. But your risk profile flips completely. As a seller, your maximum profit is capped at the premium received, while your potential loss can be theoretically unlimited (for naked call sellers) or very large (for put sellers if the market crashes).
This is why option selling requires margin โ the exchange wants to ensure you can cover potential losses. Professional traders who sell options manage this risk carefully through hedging, position sizing, and strict stop-losses. Don't sell naked options until you genuinely understand the mechanics.
Option pricing is driven by five key variables known as "the Greeks." You don't need to master all of them, but understanding the first two is essential:
โ ๏ธ The Theta Trap: If you buy a far OTM option with 7 days to expiry, theta decay is brutal. You can be directionally right โ the stock does move your way โ but still lose money because time decay ate your premium faster than the move benefited you. Always check your breakeven and the time remaining before buying.
Before entering any options trade, run it through the calculator first. Inputs should be your actual planned strike price, the current market premium, your realistic expiry target for the underlying, and your true lot size and brokerage. If the resulting breakeven is too far from current price, or if the max loss is more than 1โ2% of your total portfolio, reconsider the trade.
Use the P&L chart to visualise the full range of outcomes โ not just the scenario where you're right. Ask yourself: can I handle the max loss scenario? If yes, the trade may be worth considering. If the answer is "I'll manage it when it happens," that's not a plan โ that's hope.
"The best options traders aren't the ones who are always right. They're the ones who survive long enough for their edge to play out."
Options are genuinely powerful โ for hedging portfolios, generating income through selling, or making leveraged directional bets with defined risk. But they reward preparation and punish carelessness. Start with paper trading, understand the instrument deeply before committing real capital, and always use a proper calculator before placing a trade. This tool is here to make that process faster, clearer, and smarter โ every single time.