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Volume Changes Near Expiry

Volume change is the shift in how many contracts trade at each strike per session, which typically surges overall and concentrates around at-the-money strikes as an option series approaches expiry.

Quick answer: Volume change is the shift in how many contracts trade at each strike per session, which typically surges overall and concentrates around at-the-money strikes as an option series approaches expiry.

In simple words

Volume is simply how many contracts changed hands at a strike during the day — a flow measure, unlike open interest, which is a stock measure of what's still outstanding. As expiry nears, total volume on the chain usually rises (more people are actively adjusting, closing or rolling positions) and that volume increasingly clusters around the current at-the-money strikes rather than being spread evenly across the chain.

Purpose

Volume tells you where the actual trading action is happening right now, which complements open interest (what's built up) and liquidity (how tradable a strike is) to give a fuller live picture of the chain.

Visual explanation

Volume Changes Near Expiry

Traded volume across strikes rises sharply near expiry and concentrates around at-the-money as time runs out.

24k24.25k24.5k24.75k25k25.25k25.5k25.75k26kCall OIPut OIStrike price

Professional explanation

Volume versus open interest — a flow versus a stock

Volume counts transactions during a period; open interest counts contracts still open at a point in time. A strike can have very high volume with little OI change if buyers and sellers are simply trading in and out of the same contracts repeatedly, or low volume with steady OI if positions are being held rather than actively traded.

Why total volume rises into expiry

As the series nears its end, more participants are actively managing positions — closing out to avoid settlement risk, rolling to the next series, adjusting hedges, or taking fresh short-dated bets on the final moves. All of this activity shows up as rising volume, particularly in the last one or two sessions, and most sharply on expiry day itself.

Where the volume concentrates

Volume near expiry concentrates heavily at and just around the at-the-money strikes, where gamma and price sensitivity are highest and where the outcome (in- or out-of-the-money) is still genuinely uncertain. Deep in-the-money and deep out-of-the-money strikes usually see comparatively little fresh trading, since their outcome is largely already decided.

Reading a volume spike correctly

A sudden volume spike at a specific strike can reflect a single large participant adjusting a big position, a burst of retail activity, or expiry-related mechanical flows (like rollovers) — the volume number alone does not distinguish between these. Pairing the volume spike with the accompanying OI and price change gives a much clearer read on what actually happened.

Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75

On a typical mid-week session, the Nifty (spot 25,000) chain might see total volume of 40 lakh contracts across all strikes. On expiry day itself, with the same spot level, total volume can run several times higher, with a large share of that concentrated in the 24,950–25,050 strikes as traders actively square off, roll or take last-session positions around the money.

NSE's option-chain page reports both total traded volume and its change alongside OI for every strike, letting Indian traders directly compare where the day's actual activity sits versus where the standing open interest is concentrated.

Limitations

  • Volume alone does not reveal whether trades were opening new positions or closing existing ones.
  • A volume spike at one strike can come from a single large participant rather than broad market interest.
  • Expiry-day volume is elevated for mechanical reasons (rollovers, square-offs) as well as fresh directional activity, and the chain does not distinguish between them.

Why it matters in practice

  • Expect total volume to rise noticeably in the final sessions before expiry, peaking on expiry day itself.
  • Watch for volume concentrating around the current at-the-money strikes rather than spreading evenly.
  • Pair a volume spike with the accompanying OI and price change before drawing a conclusion from it.
  • Don't assume high volume at a far strike reflects broad interest — check whether it's an isolated large trade.

Common mistakes

  • Reading a volume spike as automatically bullish or bearish without checking price and OI alongside it.
  • Ignoring that expiry-day volume is inflated partly by mechanical rollover and square-off activity.
  • Assuming volume and open interest always move together, when they can diverge significantly.
  • Chasing a single strike's sudden volume burst without understanding what drove it.

Professional usage

Professionals read volume together with OI change and price movement as a three-way check — rising volume with rising OI and rising price implies fresh buying, for instance, while rising volume with falling OI implies unwinding — rather than treating volume as meaningful in isolation, and they discount some of expiry-day's volume surge as routine rollover and square-off flow.

Key takeaways

  • Volume measures the day's actual trades at a strike; open interest measures what remains open — they are related but different.
  • Total volume typically rises into expiry and concentrates around the at-the-money strikes.
  • Read volume alongside OI change and price direction, not on its own, to interpret what actually happened.

Frequently asked questions

What is trading volume on the option chain?
It's the number of contracts that were bought and sold at a strike during a session — a measure of the day's actual activity, as opposed to open interest, which measures contracts still outstanding.
How is volume different from open interest?
Volume is a flow measure counting the period's transactions; open interest is a stock measure counting contracts currently held open. High volume can occur with little change in OI if positions are being actively traded in and out.
Why does volume increase near expiry?
Because more participants are actively closing, rolling or adjusting positions as the series nears its end, and this activity peaks sharply on expiry day itself.
Which strikes see the most volume near expiry?
Typically the at-the-money and near-the-money strikes, where price sensitivity is highest and the in-the-money/out-of-the-money outcome is still genuinely uncertain.
Does high volume at a strike mean strong sentiment?
Not necessarily. It could reflect a single large trader adjusting a position, mechanical rollover activity, or broad participant interest — the volume figure alone doesn't distinguish between these causes.
Why is expiry-day volume usually the highest of the week?
Because traders must close, exercise-manage or roll their positions by the close of expiry day, concentrating a week's worth of position adjustments into that single session.
Can volume be high while open interest falls?
Yes — this typically indicates that existing positions are being closed (unwound) rather than new ones opened, since contracts are trading heavily but the outstanding count is shrinking.
Where can I see live volume data for Nifty options?
On NSE's option-chain page, which reports the day's traded volume for every strike alongside open interest and price.
Is volume useful for spotting where the market is focused?
Yes, it's a good real-time indicator of which strikes are currently attracting active trading, which often (but not always) aligns with the at-the-money zone.
Does rollover activity inflate expiry-day volume?
Yes. Traders moving futures and options positions from the expiring series to the next series add to that day's volume without necessarily reflecting a fresh directional view.
Should I trade a strike just because it has high volume?
High volume alone isn't a reason to trade a strike — it should be considered alongside your own strategy, the OI trend, and price context. This is educational information, not advice.
Can volume predict where price will go?
Not reliably by itself. Volume shows where activity is happening, not which direction it implies — that requires reading it together with price and OI changes.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Volume Changes Near Expiry.

What does trading volume mean for options?
It's how many contracts were actually bought and sold at a strike during the day — different from open interest, which is how many remain open.
Why is option volume higher on expiry day?
Because many traders are closing, rolling or adjusting their positions before the contract expires, all within that single session.
Does high volume mean an option is a good trade?
Not by itself — high volume just means it's actively traded, which usually also means better liquidity, but it doesn't tell you which direction the market will move.
Where can I check option volume for Nifty?
On NSE's live option-chain page, which shows the day's traded volume for every strike.
Is volume the same as open interest?
No. Volume is the day's trading activity; open interest is the number of contracts still outstanding — they can move in the same direction or in opposite directions.

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.