Time Decay (Theta Decay)
Time decay is the steady loss of an option's extrinsic value as expiry approaches — measured by Theta, it is the option buyer's constant headwind and the seller's steady income.
In one line: Time decay is the steady loss of an option's extrinsic value as expiry approaches — measured by Theta, it is the option buyer's constant headwind and the seller's steady income.
In simple words
Time decay is the way an option loses value simply because time passes. Every day that goes by, an option's time value shrinks a little, even if the underlying doesn't move. The decay is slow when expiry is far away and speeds up dramatically in the final days. Buyers fight time decay; sellers profit from it.
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Time Decay (Theta Decay)
Time decay accelerates toward expiry: an at-the-money option holds value early, then loses it faster and faster as the final sessions approach.
Why options decay with time
An option's premium includes extrinsic value that reflects the chance of a favourable move before expiry. As time passes, that chance shrinks because there is less time left for the move to happen — so extrinsic value erodes toward zero. This erosion is time decay, quantified by the Greek Theta. Intrinsic value is unaffected; only the time-value portion decays. By expiry, all time value is gone and the option is worth exactly its intrinsic value.
Decay is non-linear and accelerates
Time decay does not happen at a constant rate. Time value decays roughly with the square root of time remaining, so an option loses value slowly when expiry is weeks away and rapidly in the final days. A monthly option barely decays in its first week but can shed a third of its remaining value in the last three sessions. This acceleration is why weekly-option buyers are racing the clock and why sellers concentrate their harvesting near expiry.
Time decay is strongest at-the-money
At-the-money options have the most extrinsic value to lose, so they carry the largest Theta and decay the fastest in absolute terms. Deep in-the-money options are mostly intrinsic value and decay little; far out-of-the-money options have little value left to lose. This is why premium-selling income strategies — short straddles, strangles and Iron Condors — target near-the-money strikes, where the time-decay harvest is richest.
Trading with and against time decay
Time decay defines the buyer-seller battle. Buyers need the underlying to move enough, fast enough, to overcome the daily decay — being right eventually is not enough if the option decays first. Sellers profit as decay erodes the premium, but they carry the Gamma and volatility risk that a sudden move brings. Choosing your side means choosing whether time is your ally or your enemy — and it does not pause for weekends or NSE holidays.
Practical example (Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty, lot size 75
Nifty at 20,000, five days to weekly expiry. You buy the 20,000 CE for ₹120 with Theta around −18. If Nifty sits still for a day, the option decays to about ₹102 — a loss of ₹18 × 75 = ₹1,350 per lot from time alone. Two flat days and you are down roughly ₹2,600 before any move. A seller of that same call collects that decay instead. Over the weekend, two or three days of Theta accrue even though the market is closed.
Why it matters in practice
- Time decay erodes an option's extrinsic value daily; intrinsic value is unaffected.
- It accelerates as expiry nears — weekly options can lose most of their value in the final days.
- At-the-money options decay fastest, which is why income strategies sell near-the-money premium.
- Decay runs over weekends and holidays — factor in multiple days of Theta when holding across them.
Common mistakes
- Buying cheap out-of-the-money weeklies and holding them flat while accelerating Theta wipes out the premium.
- Assuming decay is linear and being surprised by the collapse in the final sessions.
- Selling premium for the decay without sizing for the Gamma and volatility risk it carries.
- Holding long options over a long weekend and losing multiple days of time value with no chance of a move.
What professionals do
Skilled buyers minimise time-decay drag by choosing slightly in-the-money strikes (more intrinsic, less time value at risk) or longer expiries that decay slowly, and they demand a timely catalyst rather than hoping. Skilled sellers harvest decay by selling near-the-money premium — ideally when implied volatility is high — while actively managing the Gamma bill, closing or rolling before the most dangerous final-session Gamma. Both sides treat time decay as a force to be positioned around, never ignored.
Key takeaway
Time decay is the daily erosion of an option's time value, measured by Theta. It accelerates toward expiry, hits at-the-money options hardest, and never pauses for weekends. Buyers must overcome it with timely moves; sellers harvest it while managing the risk that comes attached.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is time decay in options?
Why do options lose value over time?
Does time decay accelerate near expiry?
Which options decay the fastest?
Is time decay good or bad?
Does time decay happen over weekends?
How do option buyers deal with time decay?
How do sellers profit from time decay?
What is the relationship between time decay and Theta?
Sources & references
Educational content only — not investment advice.