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Sensex Options Expiry

Sensex options expiry is the settlement of BSE's flagship index contract, currently on Thursday for both the weekly and the last-Thursday-of-the-month monthly, making it the BSE counterpart to NSE's Nifty expiry.

Quick answer: Sensex options expiry is the settlement of BSE's flagship index contract, currently on Thursday for both the weekly and the last-Thursday-of-the-month monthly, making it the BSE counterpart to NSE's Nifty expiry.

In simple words

Just as Nifty is NSE's flagship index contract, Sensex plays the same role on BSE. It has both a weekly expiry (every Thursday, currently) and a monthly expiry (the last Thursday of the month), mirroring Nifty's weekly-plus-monthly structure but on a different exchange and a different weekday. Since BSE relaunched its derivatives push, Sensex options volumes have grown meaningfully, giving Indian traders an alternative venue for index options besides NSE.

Purpose

Sensex expiry gives traders exposure to BSE's benchmark 30-stock index through options, functioning as BSE's equivalent of Nifty — useful for those who prefer BSE's contract specifications, want to diversify venue exposure, or wish to arbitrage pricing differences between the two exchanges' broad-market benchmarks.

Professional explanation

Weekday convention: Thursday, not Tuesday

As of September 2025, all BSE derivatives — including Sensex weekly and monthly options — expire on Thursday, in contrast to NSE's Tuesday convention for Nifty and other NSE derivatives. This is the current rule only; expiry weekdays on both exchanges have been revised before, so the live BSE circular should always be checked.

Weekly and monthly structure, mirroring Nifty

Sensex is BSE's sole weekly-expiry index contract (just as Nifty is NSE's), with a weekly expiring every Thursday and a monthly expiring on the last Thursday of the month. This mirrors the post-2024 NSE structure where Nifty alone carries the weekly among NSE indices.

Sensex versus Nifty as instruments

Both track a broad basket of India's largest listed companies, but Sensex comprises 30 stocks versus Nifty's 50, giving it a somewhat different, more concentrated composition. Historically Sensex and Nifty move very closely together, though not identically, given the different stock baskets and weightings.

Growing BSE derivatives liquidity

BSE has invested significantly in growing its derivatives segment, and Sensex options liquidity has increased substantially in recent years, though NSE's Nifty and Bank Nifty still carry the largest share of India's total index options volume. Traders should compare bid-ask spreads and open interest between the two venues for the strikes they intend to trade.

Practical example (Nifty / Bank Nifty)

Illustrative — Nifty spot 25,000, lot size 75

With Sensex around 82,000 (illustrative) and its weekly at-the-money option trading on a Thursday expiry cycle, a trader who already runs a Nifty options book might layer in Sensex options to diversify venue exposure or to trade a view on the narrower 30-stock basket versus the broader 50-stock Nifty.

Because Sensex expires on Thursday while Nifty expires on Tuesday (under current rules), a trader active on both exchanges effectively has index-option expiries spread across two separate weekdays each week, which changes how they plan their weekly trading calendar compared with trading NSE alone.

Advantages

  • Offers weekly expiry on a broad-market index, mirroring Nifty's structure but on BSE with different timing.
  • Growing liquidity gives an alternative or complementary venue to NSE for index options.
  • The differing weekday (Thursday vs Nifty's Tuesday) can be used to spread out a trader's expiry-day exposure across the week.

Limitations

  • Historically thinner liquidity than Nifty, though the gap has been narrowing.
  • The Thursday convention, like NSE's Tuesday one, has been revised before and should not be assumed permanent.
  • Different index composition (30 vs 50 stocks) means Sensex and Nifty can diverge modestly, complicating direct comparisons.

Why it matters in practice

  • Confirm the current Sensex expiry weekday on BSE before building any trading calendar around it.
  • Compare liquidity and spreads between Sensex and Nifty for your specific strikes before choosing a venue.
  • Treat Sensex's 30-stock composition as meaningfully different from Nifty's 50-stock basket, not a perfect substitute.
  • If trading both exchanges, plan for expiry-day risk on two separate weekdays (Tuesday and Thursday) rather than one.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming Sensex expires on the same weekday as Nifty — under current rules they differ (Thursday vs Tuesday).
  • Treating Sensex and Nifty options as fully interchangeable without checking relative liquidity for the specific strike.
  • Ignoring BSE's own contract specifications (lot size, tick size) and applying NSE conventions by mistake.
  • Not checking whether the BSE expiry weekday has been revised before placing calendar-dependent trades.

Professional usage

Professionals who trade both exchanges track BSE's and NSE's expiry calendars separately, compare liquidity and spreads across Sensex and Nifty for the strikes they need, and treat the differing expiry weekdays as a feature that spreads, rather than concentrates, their weekly expiry-day risk.

Key takeaways

  • Sensex is BSE's flagship index options contract, with weekly and monthly expiry currently on Thursday.
  • This mirrors Nifty's weekly-plus-monthly structure on NSE, but on a different exchange and weekday.
  • Liquidity has grown but Sensex options are still generally less liquid than Nifty's; compare before trading.

Frequently asked questions

What day does Sensex options expire?
As of September 2025, Sensex weekly and monthly options expire on Thursday on BSE. This convention has been revised before, so confirm on BSE's live circulars.
Does Sensex have both weekly and monthly expiry?
Yes. Sensex has a weekly expiry every Thursday and a monthly expiry on the last Thursday of the month, mirroring the structure Nifty has on NSE.
How is Sensex different from Nifty as an index?
Sensex tracks 30 large BSE-listed companies while Nifty tracks 50 NSE-listed companies. They move closely together but are not identical due to different compositions and weightings.
Is Sensex as liquid as Nifty for options trading?
Generally still less liquid than Nifty, though BSE's derivatives liquidity has grown substantially in recent years. Compare spreads and open interest for your specific strike before trading.
Are Sensex options cash-settled?
Yes. Like all Indian index derivatives, Sensex options are cash-settled against the final settlement price, with no delivery of the index.
Why does Sensex expire on a different day than Nifty?
Because NSE and BSE each set their own derivatives expiry weekday, and under current convention NSE (including Nifty) uses Tuesday while BSE (including Sensex) uses Thursday.
Which clearing corporation settles Sensex trades?
BSE derivatives are cleared through the Indian Clearing Corporation (ICCL), which guarantees settlement, distinct from NSE's clearing corporation for Nifty trades.
Can Sensex's expiry weekday change again?
Yes, in principle. Both NSE's and BSE's expiry weekdays have been revised more than once in recent years, so neither should be treated as permanently fixed.
Is Sensex European-style and auto-exercised?
Yes, like all Indian exchange-traded index options, Sensex options are European-style (exercised only at expiry) and auto-exercised if in-the-money.
What time does Sensex stop trading on expiry day?
At the normal market close, 3:30 PM IST, with the final settlement price computed from the index's last 30 minutes of trading, the same convention as NSE.
Should I trade Sensex or Nifty options?
It depends on your liquidity needs, venue preference and whether you want to spread expiry-day exposure across both Tuesday and Thursday. This is educational information, not a recommendation.
Do Sensex and Nifty expiries ever fall on the same week?
Yes, most weeks both have an expiry, just on different weekdays (currently Tuesday for Nifty, Thursday for Sensex), so a trader active on both faces two separate expiry sessions each week.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Sensex Options Expiry.

When does Sensex options expire?
Currently every Thursday for the weekly, and the last Thursday of the month for the monthly — always verify on BSE since this has changed before.
Is Sensex the BSE version of Nifty?
Yes, in role — it's BSE's flagship index options contract, similar to how Nifty is NSE's, though the two indices track different stock baskets.
Are Sensex options as liquid as Nifty?
They've grown a lot but are generally still somewhat less liquid than Nifty, so check spreads for your strike before trading.
Is Sensex cash-settled like Nifty?
Yes, Sensex options are cash-settled against the final settlement price, exactly like Nifty and other Indian index options.
Why do Nifty and Sensex expire on different days?
Because NSE and BSE each set their own expiry weekday — currently Tuesday for NSE and Thursday for BSE.

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.