How Options Work: A Complete Guide for Beginners
The Four Building Blocks of Every Option
| Component | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Underlying Asset | The stock or ETF the option is based on | Apple (AAPL) stock |
| Strike Price | The price at which you can buy/sell the underlying | $200 strike |
| Expiration Date | The last day the option is valid | March 21, 2026 |
| Premium | The price you pay to buy the option contract | $5.00 per share ($500 per contract) |
Calls vs. Puts: The Two Types
A call option gives you the right to buy 100 shares at the strike price. You buy calls when you’re bullish — you think the stock will go up. If the stock rises above your strike price, the call gains value.
A put option gives you the right to sell 100 shares at the strike price. You buy puts when you’re bearish — you think the stock will go down. If the stock drops below your strike price, the put gains value.
For a deeper comparison, see our guide on calls and puts explained.
| Feature | Call Option | Put Option |
|---|---|---|
| Right to… | Buy 100 shares | Sell 100 shares |
| Profitable when… | Stock rises above strike | Stock falls below strike |
| Buyer’s max loss | Premium paid | Premium paid |
| Seller’s max loss | Theoretically unlimited | Strike price minus premium |
| Common use | Bullish speculation, covered calls | Hedging, protective puts |
How Option Contracts Are Sized
One option contract controls 100 shares of the underlying stock. So when you see an option quoted at $5.00, the actual cost is $5.00 × 100 = $500. This is the premium you pay to the seller (also called the writer) of that option.
This 100-share multiplier is what makes options both powerful and risky. A small move in the stock price can create large percentage gains or losses on the option position.
In the Money, At the Money, Out of the Money
| Term | Call Option | Put Option |
|---|---|---|
| In the Money (ITM) | Stock price > Strike price | Stock price < Strike price |
| At the Money (ATM) | Stock price ≈ Strike price | Stock price ≈ Strike price |
| Out of the Money (OTM) | Stock price < Strike price | Stock price > Strike price |
ITM options have intrinsic value — they’re worth something if exercised immediately. OTM options have only time value — they’re a bet that the stock will move enough before expiration.
What Determines an Option’s Price?
An option’s premium is driven by five factors. Understanding these is critical before you start trading. For the full breakdown, see options pricing.
| Factor | Impact on Calls | Impact on Puts |
|---|---|---|
| Stock price moves up | Price increases | Price decreases |
| Strike price (higher) | Price decreases | Price increases |
| Time to expiration (more) | Price increases | Price increases |
| Implied volatility rises | Price increases | Price increases |
| Interest rates rise | Slight increase | Slight decrease |
Buying vs. Selling Options
Buying options (going long) gives you rights. Your maximum loss is the premium you paid. You need the stock to move significantly in your direction to profit, because you also need to overcome the premium cost and time decay.
Selling options (going short / writing) gives you obligations. You collect the premium upfront and profit if the option expires worthless. But your risk can be substantial — especially selling naked calls, where losses are theoretically unlimited.
Most professional options strategies involve selling options to collect premium. Popular income strategies include covered calls and iron condors.
The Role of the Greeks
The Greeks measure how an option’s price changes relative to different variables:
| Greek | Measures | Key Insight |
|---|---|---|
| Delta | Price sensitivity to stock movement | A delta of 0.50 means +$0.50 per $1 stock move |
| Gamma | Rate of change of delta | Accelerates near expiration for ATM options |
| Theta | Time decay per day | Options lose value every day — hurts buyers, helps sellers |
| Vega | Sensitivity to implied volatility | Higher volatility = higher option prices |
Key Takeaways
- Options give you the right (not obligation) to buy or sell a stock at a set price before expiration.
- Call options profit when the stock rises; put options profit when it falls.
- One contract = 100 shares. A $5 option costs $500 to buy.
- Option prices depend on stock price, strike, time, volatility, and interest rates.
- Buying options limits your loss to the premium; selling options can carry unlimited risk if unhedged.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you lose more than you invest in options?
If you’re buying options (calls or puts), your maximum loss is the premium you paid. If you’re selling naked options — particularly naked calls — your losses can exceed your initial position significantly. This is why brokers require margin accounts and often restrict naked option selling.
What happens when an option expires?
If an option is in the money at expiration, it’s automatically exercised (you buy or sell 100 shares). If it’s out of the money, it expires worthless and you lose the premium. Most options traders close positions before expiration rather than exercising.
How much money do you need to start trading options?
You can buy options for as little as the cost of one contract. A cheap out-of-the-money option might cost $50-100, while an in-the-money option on a high-priced stock could cost thousands. Selling options requires margin, typically $2,000+ minimum. Start small and learn the mechanics.
Are options better than stocks?
Options aren’t inherently better or worse — they serve different purposes. Stocks are simpler and don’t expire. Options offer leverage, hedging ability, and income strategies that stocks alone can’t provide. For a detailed comparison, see options vs. stocks.
What is the most common options strategy for beginners?
Buying calls on stocks you’re bullish on is the simplest strategy. The covered call — owning stock and selling calls against it — is the most popular income strategy and a natural next step for stock investors moving into options.