Quarterly Expiry
A quarterly expiry contract expires at the end of a calendar quarter — on the last expiry weekday of March, June, September or December — and, together with longer serial months, extends the derivatives curve beyond the near months.
Quick answer: A quarterly expiry contract expires at the end of a calendar quarter — on the last expiry weekday of March, June, September or December — and, together with longer serial months, extends the derivatives curve beyond the near months.
In simple words
Beyond the busy weekly and monthly contracts, exchanges also list longer-dated contracts that expire at quarter-ends. These quarterly (and half-yearly/yearly) expiries are less actively traded by retail participants but matter for longer-term hedging and for building a fuller picture of the market's volatility term structure.
Purpose
Quarterly and longer expiries let institutions hedge or position over multi-month horizons and give the market a longer volatility term structure to reference. They round out the maturity ladder beyond the near and next month.
Professional explanation
Where quarterly expiries fit
NSE lists index options and futures across near-month, next-month and further serial/quarterly maturities. The quarterly contracts expire on the last expiry weekday of March, June, September and December. Liquidity thins as maturity lengthens, so most volume sits in the near contracts while the quarterlies serve longer-horizon needs.
Longer-dated (half-yearly and yearly) contracts
NSE also offers long-dated Nifty options with half-yearly and yearly expiries stretching out several years. These are used mainly by institutions for structured and long-horizon hedging. They carry large time value, low gamma and high vega, behaving very differently from a weekly.
Why retail rarely trades them
Long-dated contracts have wide bid-ask spreads and low volume, so entering and exiting is costly. Their slow theta and high sensitivity to interest rates and long-term volatility make them tools for hedgers rather than short-term traders.
Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75
A long-term investor wanting to hedge a Nifty portfolio for six months might buy a longer-dated Nifty put expiring at a future quarter-end rather than rolling weekly puts. The single quarterly-plus hedge avoids repeated rollover costs, though it ties up more premium up front because of the larger time value.
Index futures quarterly rollovers (March, June, September, December) are also watched globally as reference points; in India the near-month monthly still dominates activity, with quarterlies used mainly for longer hedges.
Advantages
- Cover multi-month horizons in a single contract, avoiding repeated weekly/monthly rollovers.
- Extend the volatility term structure for analysis and longer-term hedging.
- Lower gamma and slower theta make them steadier to hold over long periods.
Limitations
- Thin liquidity and wider spreads raise entry and exit costs.
- Large premium outlay because of high time value.
- More sensitive to interest rates and long-term volatility, and less to short-term moves.
Why it matters in practice
- Consider a quarterly or longer contract for genuine multi-month hedging rather than rolling short options.
- Account for wider spreads and lower liquidity when trading longer maturities.
- Use the quarterly points as reference maturities when reading the term structure.
Common mistakes
- Trying to day-trade illiquid long-dated contracts and paying heavily on spreads.
- Expecting a quarterly option to react like a weekly to a small index move — its gamma is far lower.
- Ignoring the interest-rate and long-vol sensitivity of long-dated options.
Professional usage
Institutions and longer-horizon hedgers use quarterly and longer expiries to lock in protection or exposure across months, manage the term structure, and avoid the frictional cost of continually rolling short-dated contracts. They price these with careful attention to rho and long-term implied volatility.
Key takeaways
- Quarterly contracts expire at quarter-ends (Mar/Jun/Sep/Dec) on the exchange's expiry weekday.
- They and longer-dated contracts suit multi-month hedging, not short-term trading.
- Liquidity thins with maturity, so spreads and costs rise for longer expiries.
Frequently asked questions
What is quarterly expiry?
Do Indian index options have quarterly expiry?
Are quarterly options liquid?
Who trades quarterly and long-dated options?
How is a quarterly option different from a monthly?
Does Nifty have contracts longer than a quarter?
Why would I use a quarterly hedge instead of weekly puts?
When do quarterly futures roll over?
Is gamma a problem for quarterly options?
Are quarterly options cash-settled?
Do quarterly expiries affect the market like monthly ones?
Should beginners trade quarterly options?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Quarterly Expiry.
What is a quarterly expiry contract?
Can I hedge my portfolio for six months with one option?
Why don't retail traders use long-dated options?
Are quarterly Nifty options cash-settled?
When do quarterly contracts expire in India?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Exchange rules change; verify current conventions on NSE/BSE.