Implied Volatility After Expiry
Implied volatility after expiry has no meaning for the contract that just expired — it ceased to exist — so market attention, liquidity and pricing shift entirely to the next series, which starts fresh and reprices implied volatility for its own new time horizon and any events within it.
Quick answer: Implied volatility after expiry has no meaning for the contract that just expired — it ceased to exist — so market attention, liquidity and pricing shift entirely to the next series, which starts fresh and reprices implied volatility for its own new time horizon and any events within it.
In simple words
Once an option expires, it is settled and gone — there is no implied volatility to speak of for something that no longer trades. What people usually mean by 'IV after expiry' is really about the next series: as soon as one weekly or monthly contract expires, the following one becomes the new near-month contract, and it carries its own fresh implied-volatility reading, shaped by whatever time and events lie ahead of it, not by what just happened in the series that ended.
Purpose
Understanding this handoff matters because traders sometimes mistakenly expect volatility patterns to 'carry over' from an expiring series to the next one, or expect implied volatility to behave in some special way immediately after expiry. In reality, the relevant question shifts entirely: what is the new front-month series pricing in, and does it reflect a genuine change in market conditions or simply a fresh contract at a fresh point on the volatility term structure.
Visual explanation
Implied Volatility After Expiry
Once a series expires, its implied volatility becomes moot; the market's attention — and IV — resets on the new front-month series.
Professional explanation
The expired contract's IV is moot
At the moment of settlement, an option's price is fixed by its intrinsic value (or zero, if out-of-the-money) — there is no remaining time value and therefore no meaningful implied volatility left to compute; the contract simply does not exist to trade anymore. Any 'IV' figure associated with it after expiry is a historical artefact, not a live market input.
The next series starts fresh
As soon as an expiry passes, the exchange's next weekly or monthly contract becomes the new near-month series and the focus of trading activity and liquidity. Its implied volatility is priced independently based on its own remaining time to expiry, the underlying's current conditions, and any scheduled events that now fall within its life — it is not simply a continuation of whatever the just-expired series was showing in its final hours.
Post-event IV crush versus the expiry handoff
A post-event IV crush — a sharp drop in implied volatility right after an anticipated event (results, a policy decision) resolves and uncertainty is removed — is a distinct phenomenon from the routine handoff at expiry. A crush can happen mid-life, well before an option's own expiry, whenever the specific uncertainty it was pricing gets resolved; the expiry handoff, by contrast, happens because the old contract stops existing, not because of any single resolved event.
Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)
Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75
Suppose a Nifty weekly series expiring Tuesday finishes with its at-the-money option's remaining implied volatility calculation growing erratic as its price shrinks to near zero in the final hour — that reading becomes irrelevant the moment the contract settles. The next Tuesday's weekly, now the new near-month series, opens with its own at-the-money implied volatility — perhaps back to a baseline of around 12–13% if no major event lies within its life, entirely independent of whatever the just-expired series showed in its last minutes.
When Nifty's front-month monthly contract expires, the next month's contract — until then the 'next month' series — immediately becomes the new near-month reference for India VIX's 30-day calculation, illustrating how the entire volatility reference point rolls forward mechanically at each expiry, not just for a single strike but across the index-wide measure.
Why it matters in practice
- Do not look for an implied-volatility reading on a contract that has already expired and settled — there is nothing left to price.
- When a new near-month series begins after an expiry, evaluate its implied volatility on its own terms, not as a continuation of the previous series' final readings.
- Distinguish a genuine post-event IV crush (uncertainty resolved) from the routine mechanical handoff that happens at every expiry regardless of events.
- Remember that India VIX's reference contracts roll forward at each monthly expiry, shifting its 30-day calculation to the new near- and next-month series.
Common mistakes
- Trying to interpret or trade an 'IV level' on a contract that has already expired and settled.
- Assuming the new front-month series will open with implied volatility similar to whatever the expiring series showed in its erratic final hours.
- Confusing the routine expiry-to-expiry handoff in the reference series with a genuine event-driven IV crush.
- Overlooking that India VIX itself rolls its reference contracts forward at expiry, which can cause its calculation basis to shift even without a change in market sentiment.
Professional usage
Professional volatility traders reset their analysis at every expiry, evaluating the new near-month series' implied volatility fresh — against its own remaining time, any events within its life, and the broader volatility term structure — rather than anchoring to whatever the just-expired contract's final, often noisy, IV readings showed. They also track how reference measures like India VIX mechanically roll their underlying contracts forward at each expiry.
Key takeaways
- An expired option's implied volatility is moot — there is nothing left to price once the contract has settled.
- The next series becomes the new near-month contract and reprices implied volatility fresh, independent of the series that just ended.
- A post-event IV crush is a distinct phenomenon from the routine expiry handoff, driven by resolved uncertainty rather than the calendar alone.
Frequently asked questions
Does an expired option still have implied volatility?
What happens to implied volatility right after expiry?
Does the next expiry inherit the implied volatility of the one that just ended?
What is a post-event IV crush?
Is IV crush the same thing as the expiry handoff?
Does India VIX change at expiry?
Why did implied volatility look strange just before my option expired?
Should I trade the new front-month option based on the old one's final IV reading?
Does implied volatility usually rise or fall right after expiry?
Why does the option chain look different the day after expiry?
Can implied volatility crush happen before expiry rather than after?
Does the underlying's actual volatility change at expiry?
Why do traders 'roll' options around expiry if IV resets anyway?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Implied Volatility After Expiry.
Does implied volatility exist after an option expires?
What happens to IV when one expiry ends and the next begins?
Is IV crush the same as what happens at expiry?
Why does implied volatility look odd right before an option settles?
Should I expect the new weekly option to have the same IV as the one that just expired?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 11 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Exchange rules change; verify current conventions on NSE/BSE.