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Options Profit Calculator

Model a long call or put. Enter the strike, the premium you pay, and a price at expiration to see profit or loss, your break-even, and the most you can lose.

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Profit / loss
Break-even price
Max loss
Return on premium

Profit / loss at expiration

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Check it out

Single-leg options, simplified

This models buying one option (a long call or put) held to expiration. Each contract controls 100 shares. A call profits when the stock rises above the strike plus premium; a put profits when it falls below the strike minus premium. The most you can lose is the premium paid. This is educational, not trading advice.

How it’s calculated

Profit = (intrinsic value βˆ’ premium) Γ— 100 Γ— contracts. Break-even = strike Β± premium. Max loss = premium paid.

Results update as you type and are estimates, not professional advice β€” verify important decisions with a qualified professional.

Worked example

A long $100 call bought for $3, with the stock at $110 at expiration, profits $700 (break-even $103, max loss $300).

Common mistakes

  • Forgetting each contract controls 100 shares.
  • Applying it to spreads or selling, which it does not model.

Where it is used

  • Checking the payoff of a long call or put.
  • Finding the break-even price before a trade.

Frequently asked questions

Does this handle spreads or selling options?

No — it covers buying a single call or put. Multi-leg strategies need a dedicated tool.

What is break-even?

The underlying price where your profit is zero: strike plus premium for calls, strike minus premium for puts.

Why is max loss just the premium?

For a long option, the most you can lose is what you paid — the option simply expires worthless.