Weekly Expiry
Weekly expiry options are short-dated index contracts that expire every week, offering cheap premiums and fast time decay — popular for short-term trading but demanding tight risk control because they move and decay quickly.
In one line: Weekly expiry options are short-dated index contracts that expire every week, offering cheap premiums and fast time decay — popular for short-term trading but demanding tight risk control because they move and decay quickly.
In simple words
Weekly options expire at the end of each week rather than each month. They are cheaper than monthly options and decay much faster, which makes them a favourite for short-term traders and expiry-day strategies on Nifty and Bank Nifty. The speed cuts both ways: big percentage gains are possible, but so are rapid losses from time decay and sharp moves.
Visual
Weekly Expiry
Weekly options live entirely in the steep part of the time-decay curve — value bleeds fast and accelerates into the final sessions.
What weekly expiry means
A weekly expiry option settles at the end of its trading week, giving it just a few days of life. The NSE lists weekly expiries for its major index options; the exact expiry weekday and the list of products with weeklies are set by the exchange and revised periodically, so always check the current NSE calendar. Because they are so short-dated, weekly options carry little time value relative to monthlies and are dominated by Delta, Gamma and Theta rather than Vega.
Fast time decay is the defining feature
A weekly option spends its entire life in the steep part of the time-decay curve. Theta is high relative to the premium, so an out-of-the-money weekly can lose most of its value in two or three flat sessions. This is why weekly buyers need the move to happen quickly — being right eventually is worthless if the option decays first — and why premium sellers are drawn to weeklies to harvest that rapid decay.
High Gamma near expiry
As expiry approaches, at-the-money weekly options develop enormous Gamma, so their Delta swings sharply on small index moves. This makes the last day or two extremely volatile: positions can flip from profit to loss quickly, and naked sellers face accelerating risk. The combination of high Theta (favouring sellers) and high Gamma (favouring buyers on big moves) makes weekly expiry a battleground where risk control matters more than any prediction.
Who should trade weeklies
Weekly options suit traders with a clear short-term catalyst and strict risk discipline. They are efficient for expressing a quick directional view cheaply, and for premium-selling strategies that harvest decay. They are dangerous for buyers who hold and hope, and for sellers who over-size into the Gamma-heavy final sessions. Beginners are usually better served learning on monthlies before graduating to the faster weekly cycle.
Practical example (Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty, lot size 75
It is Monday and a Nifty weekly option expires Thursday. You buy a slightly-OTM 20,100 CE for ₹70 with Nifty at 20,000. If Nifty jumps to 20,200 by Tuesday, Gamma and Delta can lift the option to ₹130 for a fast gain. But if Nifty stays flat, Theta erodes the ₹70 to perhaps ₹40 by Tuesday and near ₹10 by Thursday. The same ₹70 in a monthly option would barely move over those days. Speed defines the weekly.
Weekly vs monthly expiry
| Weekly | Monthly | |
|---|---|---|
| Time to expiry | A few days | Up to a month |
| Premium cost | Cheaper | More expensive |
| Time decay | Very fast | Slow until final week |
| Best for | Short-term / expiry trades | Positional views |
| Vega (volatility) risk | Low | Higher |
Why it matters in practice
- Weekly options are cheap and decay fast — ideal for quick, catalyst-driven trades.
- High Theta favours sellers; high Gamma near expiry favours buyers on big moves.
- Buyers need the move to happen quickly; flat sessions destroy weekly premium.
- The Gamma-heavy final days demand small size and tight risk control.
Common mistakes
- Buying OTM weeklies and holding them flat while accelerating Theta wipes out the premium.
- Over-sizing short weekly options into the high-Gamma final sessions.
- Trading weeklies without a near-term catalyst, relying on hope over timing.
- Ignoring how a small index move can swing an ATM weekly's value near expiry.
What professionals do
Experienced traders use weeklies with precision: buyers enter with a clear catalyst and a tight time stop, taking profits quickly rather than riding decay; sellers harvest the rapid Theta but keep size small and step back from the most Gamma-heavy final hours unless they are expiry specialists. They treat the weekly as a fast, unforgiving instrument that rewards discipline and punishes hope.
Key takeaway
Weekly expiry options are cheap, fast-decaying, short-dated contracts. Their high Theta suits sellers and their high near-expiry Gamma suits buyers on quick moves — but both demand strict risk control. Match them to a near-term catalyst, never to hope.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is weekly expiry in options?
Why do weekly options decay so fast?
Are weekly options good for beginners?
Which is better, weekly or monthly options?
Why is expiry day so volatile for weeklies?
Can I sell weekly options for income?
When do Nifty weekly options expire?
Do weekly options have less Vega risk?
How should I manage risk on weekly options?
Sources & references
Educational content only — not investment advice.