Price magnetIntermediate

Max Pain on the Option Chain

Max pain is the strike price at which the aggregate payout to all option holders (calls and puts combined), calculated across the whole option chain, would be lowest if the underlying settled exactly there at expiry.

Quick answer: Max pain is the strike price at which the aggregate payout to all option holders (calls and puts combined), calculated across the whole option chain, would be lowest if the underlying settled exactly there at expiry.

In simple words

Imagine adding up what every call buyer and every put buyer on the chain would collectively be owed if the index settled at each possible strike. Max pain is simply the strike where that total payout is smallest — in other words, the price point that would cause the most pain to option buyers as a group (and correspondingly the least payout obligation for option sellers as a group). It's a calculation, not a prediction, though some traders watch it because price sometimes drifts toward it near expiry.

Purpose

Max pain gives traders a single reference strike derived purely from the current OI distribution across the whole chain. It's used as one lens on where hedging and unwinding flows from large option writers might exert a mild pull on price into expiry — never as a guaranteed target.

Visual explanation

Max Pain on the Option Chain

Max pain is the strike where total option-holder payout, summed across every strike on the chain, is lowest.

23.75k24k24.25k24.5k24.75k25k25.25k25.5k25.75k26k26.25kMax painTotal payoutStrike price

Professional explanation

How max pain is actually calculated

For every candidate settlement strike, the calculation sums the intrinsic value that would be owed to every in-the-money call and put across all strikes on the chain, weighted by their open interest. This is repeated for each strike on the chain, and the strike with the smallest total payout is the max-pain point. It is a mechanical OI-weighted calculation, recomputed continuously as OI changes through the day.

Why price sometimes gravitates toward max pain

The theory is that large option writers, who benefit when the underlying settles near max pain, may hedge their positions in ways that create mild buying or selling pressure toward that level as expiry nears — for example, delta-hedging a large short position can nudge the underlying gently. This is a plausible mechanism, not a guaranteed force; many other flows (news, broad market moves, large directional trades) can easily overwhelm it.

Why max pain is a tendency, not a rule

On many expiries, especially calm ones, the settlement price does land reasonably close to the calculated max-pain strike. But on plenty of others — especially when there is a strong trend or a market-moving event — price settles well away from max pain. Academic and practitioner studies on this are mixed, and the honest framing is that max pain describes an OI-weighted equilibrium point, not a mechanism that reliably pins price.

Max pain moves as OI changes

Because max pain is recalculated from live OI, it is not a fixed target — it can shift meaningfully during expiry week as positions are added, closed or rolled. A max-pain level noted on Monday can be a different strike by Thursday, so it needs to be checked close to expiry rather than assumed static.

Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75

On Nifty (spot 25,050) expiry morning, running the payout calculation across the chain shows total option-holder payout is lowest if Nifty settles at 25,000 — that is the max-pain strike for this expiry. If Nifty is trading at 25,120 with an hour left, a trader watching max pain notes the 25,000 pull but recognises current price is 120 points away, and that any of several forces (not just max-pain-related hedging) could still decide where it actually settles.

Several Indian broker and analytics platforms (in addition to manual OI-chain calculations) publish a live max-pain figure for Nifty and Bank Nifty derived from NSE's OI data, updated through the session as OI shifts.

Limitations

  • Max pain is recalculated from live OI and can shift materially during expiry week, so a stale reading is misleading.
  • It reflects only OI-weighted payout, ignoring news, broader market trend and non-hedging order flow.
  • Empirically price lands near max pain on some expiries and well away from it on others — it is not a reliable predictor.

Why it matters in practice

  • Recalculate or refresh max pain close to the actual expiry session rather than relying on an early-week figure.
  • Treat max pain as one input alongside OI-by-strike, PCR and price action, not a target to trade toward.
  • Expect max pain's pull, if any, to be strongest in calm markets and weakest during strong trends or news events.
  • Never size a position on the assumption that price 'must' reach the max-pain strike.

Common mistakes

  • Treating max pain as a guaranteed expiry-day price target.
  • Using a max-pain figure calculated days earlier without checking it against current OI.
  • Ignoring that a strong trend or news event can easily override any max-pain pull.
  • Not understanding that max pain is calculated from OI, not from any view on fundamentals or direction.

Professional usage

Professionals use max pain as one descriptive data point among several, refresh it close to expiry, and are explicit with themselves that it is a tendency observed on some expiries, not a mechanical certainty. They pay closer attention to it in quiet, low-news expiry weeks and largely discount it when a strong trend or event is in play.

Key takeaways

  • Max pain is the strike where aggregate option-holder payout, summed across the whole chain, is lowest.
  • Price sometimes gravitates toward max pain via hedging flows near expiry — a tendency, not a rule.
  • Max pain shifts as OI changes through expiry week, so refresh it close to expiry rather than trusting an old figure.

Frequently asked questions

What is max pain in options trading?
Max pain is the strike price at which the total payout owed to all option holders (calls and puts combined) across the chain would be lowest if the underlying settled there at expiry.
How is max pain calculated?
By summing the OI-weighted intrinsic value owed at every strike for each possible settlement price across the whole chain, and finding the settlement price where that total is smallest.
Does price always settle at max pain?
No. Price sometimes settles close to max pain, especially in calm markets, but often settles well away from it, particularly during strong trends or news-driven moves. It is a tendency, not a rule.
Why would price move toward max pain?
One theory is that large option writers who benefit near max pain hedge their exposure in ways that create mild pressure toward that level as expiry nears — a plausible but not guaranteed mechanism.
Where can I check the max-pain level for Nifty?
Several broker and analytics platforms publish a live max-pain figure computed from NSE's option-chain OI data, and it can also be calculated manually from the published chain.
Does max pain change during the day?
Yes. Because it depends on open interest, which changes as positions are added or closed, the max-pain strike can shift during expiry week and even during the expiry session itself.
Is max pain the same as the settlement price?
No. Max pain is a calculated OI-based reference point; the actual settlement price is determined by the underlying's real trading in the exchange's defined settlement window and can differ from max pain.
Should I trade based on max pain?
Max pain is best treated as descriptive context, not a trading signal or target — many other factors can move price away from it. This is educational information, not advice.
Why do option sellers benefit near max pain?
Because max pain is, by definition, the strike where the total intrinsic value paid out to option buyers is smallest — meaning option sellers as a group retain the most premium if settlement lands there.
Is max pain more reliable for weekly or monthly expiry?
There's no fixed rule; reliability tends to depend more on how calm or event-driven the market is during that specific expiry than on whether it's weekly or monthly.
Can max pain be manipulated?
Because it derives from real OI positions, it isn't something a single participant can simply set, though very large concentrated positions can influence where it sits — this is different from someone directly controlling settlement price.
How far in advance should I check max pain?
Close to the actual expiry session, since it can shift meaningfully through the week as OI is added, closed or rolled — an early-week reading can be stale by expiry day.
Is max pain used by professional traders?
Some use it as one of several descriptive inputs in reading expiry-day OI structure, while being clear that it is not a reliable standalone predictor of settlement price.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Max Pain on the Option Chain.

What does max pain mean in options?
It's the strike where option buyers collectively would lose the most and option sellers keep the most premium — calculated from open interest across the whole chain.
Will Nifty always close at the max pain level?
No, not always. It sometimes settles near max pain, especially in quiet markets, but a strong trend or news event can easily push it well away from that level.
How do I find the max pain strike for Nifty?
Several trading and analytics platforms calculate and publish it live from NSE's option-chain open interest data.
Why does the max pain strike change?
Because it's based on open interest, and open interest keeps changing as traders open, close or roll positions through expiry week.
Is max pain a reliable trading signal?
It's better treated as background context than a signal — it describes an OI-based equilibrium point, not a guaranteed outcome.

Sources & references

Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Exchange rules change; verify current conventions on NSE/BSE.

Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and current exchange conventions that may change. Options and futures involve substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.