Intrinsic Value
Intrinsic value is the portion of an option's premium that comes from being in-the-money — the real, exercisable value an option would have if it expired right now.
In one line: Intrinsic value is the portion of an option's premium that comes from being in-the-money — the real, exercisable value an option would have if it expired right now.
In simple words
Intrinsic value is the 'already profitable' part of an option. For a call, it is how far the underlying is above the strike; for a put, how far below. If a Nifty 20,000 call has Nifty at 20,150, its intrinsic value is 150. Out-of-the-money options have zero intrinsic value — their entire premium is time value.
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Intrinsic Value
Intrinsic value is the payoff line's height above zero at expiry: zero below the strike for a call, then rising point-for-point above it.
How to calculate intrinsic value
For a call option, intrinsic value = max(underlying price − strike, 0). For a put, intrinsic value = max(strike − underlying price, 0). It can never be negative — if exercising would lose money, the intrinsic value is simply zero and you would let the option expire. This is the 'right, not obligation' feature turned into a number: the option is worth at least its intrinsic value and never less than zero.
Intrinsic value and moneyness
Only in-the-money options have intrinsic value. An at-the-money option, with strike equal to the underlying, has essentially zero intrinsic value. Out-of-the-money options have none at all. As an option moves deeper in-the-money, its intrinsic value grows and comes to dominate its premium, while its time value shrinks — which is why deep-ITM options behave almost exactly like the underlying itself.
At expiry, only intrinsic value remains
Time value decays to zero by expiry, so an option settles at exactly its intrinsic value. A call that is 200 points in-the-money at expiry is worth 200; one that is out-of-the-money is worth nothing. This is the anchor of option pricing: no matter how the premium fluctuates during the contract, expiry pulls it to its intrinsic value. Understanding this makes the payoff diagram intuitive — the payoff line is simply intrinsic value minus the premium paid.
Why intrinsic value matters for strike choice
Buying an in-the-money option means paying for intrinsic value that is 'real' and not subject to time decay — only the time-value portion decays. This gives ITM options a higher Delta and a better probability of finishing profitable, at the cost of a larger premium. Buying out-of-the-money means paying only for time value, which is cheaper but entirely at risk of decaying to zero. Knowing how much of a premium is intrinsic versus time value is essential to choosing wisely.
Practical example (Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty, lot size 75
Nifty at 20,150. The 20,000 CE trades at ₹210. Intrinsic value = 20,150 − 20,000 = ₹150. Time value = 210 − 150 = ₹60. If you hold to expiry and Nifty is still 20,150, the ₹60 time value decays away and you are left with ₹150 of intrinsic value. Meanwhile the 20,200 CE has zero intrinsic value (Nifty is below its strike) — its whole premium is time value and is fully at risk.
Why it matters in practice
- Intrinsic value = max(spot − strike, 0) for calls and max(strike − spot, 0) for puts; never negative.
- Only in-the-money options have intrinsic value; ATM and OTM options have none.
- At expiry, an option is worth exactly its intrinsic value — time value is gone.
- ITM options carry intrinsic value that doesn't decay, giving higher Delta and probability of profit.
Common mistakes
- Assuming an out-of-the-money option has some 'real' value — its entire premium is time value at risk.
- Not separating intrinsic from time value and overpaying for hope.
- Expecting an at-the-money option to hold value at expiry when it has almost no intrinsic value.
- Ignoring that only the time-value part of an ITM option's premium decays.
What professionals do
Professionals always know how much of a premium is intrinsic versus extrinsic before trading. When they want a high-probability directional trade with less time-decay drag, they buy in-the-money options where most of the premium is durable intrinsic value. When they sell, they know that at expiry the option collapses to intrinsic value, so they structure positions around that certainty rather than around fluctuating mid-contract prices.
Key takeaway
Intrinsic value is the in-the-money, exercisable part of an option's premium — max(spot − strike, 0) for calls. It never goes negative, only in-the-money options have it, and at expiry it is all that remains once time value has decayed away.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is intrinsic value in options?
How do you calculate intrinsic value?
Can intrinsic value be negative?
Do out-of-the-money options have intrinsic value?
What is the difference between intrinsic and time value?
What is an option worth at expiry?
Why buy an in-the-money option?
Does intrinsic value decay over time?
How does intrinsic value relate to the payoff diagram?
Sources & references
Educational content only — not investment advice.