Implied Volatility Guide — How IV Drives Options Prices
What Is Implied Volatility?
Unlike historical volatility (which looks backward at actual price moves), implied volatility looks forward. It’s derived from the current market price of an option using pricing models like Black-Scholes. Think of it as the market’s consensus forecast for future movement — expressed as an annualized percentage.
An IV of 30% on a $100 stock implies the market expects approximately a $30 move (up or down) over the next year, or about $1.70 per day (30% ÷ √252 trading days).
How IV Affects Options Prices
Higher IV directly increases the price of both calls and puts. The relationship is captured by vega — the Greek that measures an option’s price sensitivity to a 1% change in IV.
| IV Level | Options Impact | Strategy Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Low IV (below 20th percentile) | Options are cheap relative to history | Favor buying strategies: debit spreads, LEAPS, long straddles |
| Normal IV (20th–80th percentile) | Options are fairly priced | Direction matters more than IV — use any appropriate strategy |
| High IV (above 80th percentile) | Options are expensive relative to history | Favor selling strategies: credit spreads, iron condors, covered calls |
IV Rank vs. IV Percentile
Raw IV numbers aren’t useful in isolation — 40% IV on a tech stock means something different than 40% on a utility. That’s why traders use relative measures:
| Metric | IV Rank | IV Percentile |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Where current IV falls within its 52-week high-low range | What percentage of days in the past year had IV below the current level |
| Formula | (Current IV − 52w Low) ÷ (52w High − 52w Low) | % of trading days with IV below current IV |
| Example | IV range: 20%–60%, current 30% → Rank = 25% | If IV was below 30% on 200 of 252 days → Percentile = 79% |
| Sensitivity | Skewed by outlier spikes | More stable, accounts for distribution |
| Best Use | Quick reference for relative cheapness | More accurate for strategy selection |
The Volatility Smile and Skew
IV isn’t uniform across all strikes. When you plot IV against strike prices, you typically see a pattern called the volatility skew: OTM puts have higher IV than OTM calls. This happens because demand for downside protection (puts) is naturally higher than demand for upside speculation (calls).
This skew means put sellers collect relatively richer premiums, which partly explains why strategies like cash-secured puts and bull put spreads are popular among income traders.
IV Crush: What It Is and How to Handle It
IV crush happens when implied volatility drops sharply — usually after a known event like earnings, FDA decisions, or product launches. Before the event, uncertainty is high and options are expensive. After the event, uncertainty resolves and IV collapses, often by 30%–50% overnight.
This crushes the value of long options positions, even if the stock moves in your direction. A stock might gap up 3% after earnings, but your calls lose value because the IV drop outweighs the directional gain.
Trading Around IV Levels
| Scenario | Strategy | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Low IV, bullish | Bull call debit spread | Cheap options + potential IV expansion helps |
| Low IV, bearish | Bear put debit spread | Same logic — buy cheap options |
| High IV, neutral | Iron condor or short strangle | Sell expensive options, profit from IV contraction |
| High IV, bullish | Bull put credit spread | Collect rich premium, benefit from IV crush |
| Pre-earnings, any view | Caution — avoid or use defined risk | IV crush after earnings can destroy long option value |
Key Takeaways
- Implied volatility reflects the market’s expectation of future price movement — it’s forward-looking.
- High IV makes options expensive (favor selling); low IV makes them cheap (favor buying).
- Use IV rank or IV percentile to compare current IV to its own history, not to other stocks.
- IV crush after earnings can destroy long options value even if direction is correct.
- Volatility skew means OTM puts are relatively more expensive than OTM calls — this benefits put sellers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good implied volatility level for buying options?
Look for IV rank below 30% or IV percentile below the 25th percentile. This means options are cheap relative to the stock’s own history. Buying in low-IV environments gives you the potential benefit of both directional movement and IV expansion.
How does IV differ from historical volatility?
Historical volatility measures how much the stock actually moved in the past. Implied volatility measures how much the market expects it to move in the future. IV is typically higher than historical volatility because it includes a risk premium — the market usually overestimates future movement.
Why do options lose value after earnings even if the stock moves?
Because IV collapses after the uncertainty is resolved. Before earnings, IV might be 80%. After the announcement, it drops to 35%. This massive decline in IV reduces option prices — sometimes more than the stock’s movement adds. This is IV crush, and it’s the main reason buying options into earnings is difficult.
What does the VIX tell me about implied volatility?
The VIX measures the 30-day implied volatility of S&P 500 options. A VIX of 20 means the market expects roughly a 1.25% daily move in the S&P 500. The VIX is useful for broad market context, but individual stock IV can diverge significantly from the VIX level.
Should I always sell options when IV is high?
High IV improves your edge as a seller, but it also signals that the market expects a big move. If that move materializes, your short options can lose significantly. Use defined-risk strategies like credit spreads or iron condors in high-IV environments rather than naked selling, and size positions conservatively.