Iron Condor Calculator
Iron Condor Calculator
Calculate the maximum profit, maximum loss, breakeven prices, and risk-reward ratio for any iron condor options strategy. Enter your put and call strike prices, net premium received, and number of contracts to see your complete risk profile instantly.
Iron Condor Details
Results
How to Use
Follow these steps to analyze your iron condor strategy.
Step 1
Enter the lower and higher put strike prices. The lower put is the long put you buy for protection, and the higher put is the short put you sell.
Step 2
Enter the lower and higher call strike prices. The lower call is the short call you sell, and the higher call is the long call you buy for protection.
Step 3
Enter the total net premium received when opening the iron condor and the number of contracts you are trading.
Step 4
Review your max profit, max loss, upper and lower breakeven prices, and risk-reward ratio to evaluate the trade.
Understanding Iron Condors
An iron condor is a neutral options strategy that profits when the underlying stock stays within a defined price range between expiration. It combines a bull put spread (selling a higher-strike put and buying a lower-strike put) with a bear call spread (selling a lower-strike call and buying a higher-strike call). The trader collects a net premium upfront and hopes all four options expire worthless.
The maximum profit is limited to the net premium received when opening the position. This occurs when the stock price stays between the two short strikes at expiration. The maximum loss occurs when the stock moves beyond either of the long strikes and equals the width of the wider spread minus the net premium received, multiplied by 100 shares per contract.
The two breakeven points define the profitable range. The lower breakeven is the higher put strike minus the net premium, and the upper breakeven is the lower call strike plus the net premium. As long as the stock remains between these two prices at expiration, the trade is profitable.
Formulas
Max Profit = Net Premium x 100 x Contracts
Max Loss = (Spread Width - Net Premium) x 100 x Contracts
Lower Breakeven = Higher Put Strike - Net Premium
Upper Breakeven = Lower Call Strike + Net Premium
Example
Suppose you sell an iron condor with put strikes at $90 and $95, call strikes at $105 and $110, and collect a net premium of $3.00 on 1 contract. Your max profit is $3.00 x 100 = $300. The spread width is $5, so the max loss is ($5 - $3) x 100 = $200. The lower breakeven is $95 - $3 = $92, and the upper breakeven is $105 + $3 = $108.
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