Options Chart

Max Pain

Expiry Mechanics

The price where option sellers win the most

Max Pain is the strike where the combined dollar value of all outstanding options (calls + puts) is minimized — meaning option buyers collectively lose the most money there. The theory: since market makers typically sell options, they benefit when price pins near max pain at expiry. This creates a subtle gravitational pull, especially in the final days before expiration.

The Math Behind Max Pain

Max Pain is the house's favorite number. It's where the casino wins the most — and in options, the casino is whoever sold you the contract.

For every strike price, you can calculate the total dollar loss option buyers would suffer if the stock expired exactly there. Add up all in-the-money calls and puts at that price. The strike with the lowest total payout to option buyers is max pain — the point where sellers collectively owe the least.

This calculation is rerun every time open interest changes. As contracts are opened and closed throughout the week, max pain drifts. Tracking that drift can reveal the direction the market is "trying" to move heading into expiry.

Timing is everything

Max pain works best in the last 3–5 trading days before expiration, when gamma is highest and dealer hedging flows are most intense. Earlier in the expiry cycle, the effect is weak and often overwhelmed by macro news or momentum. Treat max pain as an expiry-week tool, not a weekly framework.

Does Max Pain Actually Work?

The research is mixed, but practitioners in liquid large-cap options markets report that stocks close near max pain more often than random chance would predict — particularly in low-volatility, range-bound environments. In high-volatility, news-driven environments, the effect largely disappears because external catalysts overwhelm the internal hedging mechanics.

The key insight is that max pain is not a prediction of where the stock will go — it is a description of where the market would prefer it to go, from the standpoint of option sellers. It is best used as a secondary confirmation alongside OI walls and GEX, not as a standalone signal.

Max Pain vs. OI Walls

Max pain and OI walls are related but different. Max pain is a single number — the optimal strike. OI walls show you the specific strikes with the most concentrated open interest, which often form the visible boundaries of a price range. When max pain aligns with a major OI wall, the confluence is meaningful and worth taking seriously as a near-term target heading into expiry.

How to read it

1
Start here Stock well above max pain

Gravitational pull downward — sellers may work to bring price back into range

2
Stock well below max pain

Potential drift higher into expiry as dealers adjust hedges

3
Effect is strongest

Within the last 3–5 days before expiry when gamma is at its peak

Key takeaway Use as a bias, not a prediction

Confirm with OI walls and GEX — max pain is one signal, not a guarantee