What Are 0DTE Options?
0DTE options — short for "zero days to expiration" — are options contracts that expire on the same trading day. These same-day expiring options have become one of the fastest-growing segments of the U.S. options market, with 0DTE SPY options alone accounting for over 40% of total SPY options volume on many trading days. Traders are drawn to 0DTE options because they offer defined-risk exposure with no overnight gap risk, extremely high gamma sensitivity, and low absolute premium costs compared to longer-dated contracts.
Our free 0DTE Options Dashboard gives you a real-time view of the complete same-day expiring options chain for any U.S.-listed stock or ETF. Whether you trade 0DTE SPY options, 0DTE QQQ options, or same-day expiring contracts on individual stocks, this tool provides the live pricing, volume, open interest, and Greeks data you need to make informed intraday decisions.
Why Use Our 0DTE Options Dashboard?
Auto-Filtered to Today
The dashboard automatically sets the expiration date to today, showing only same-day expiring contracts so you can focus on 0DTE action without manual filtering.
15-Second Auto-Refresh
0DTE options move fast. Our dashboard refreshes every 15 seconds to capture rapid premium changes, volume spikes, and shifting Greeks throughout the trading day.
ATM Straddle Implied Move
Instantly see the at-the-money straddle price and the implied percentage move for the day — the market's best estimate of how far the underlying could move before the close.
Most Active Strikes
Quickly identify the strikes with the highest combined call and put volume. High-volume strikes often act as magnets for price action and can signal key support/resistance levels.
Flexible Filters
Filter by contract type (calls, puts, or both) and strike price range to narrow the chain to exactly the contracts you want to monitor for your 0DTE trading strategy.
Full Greeks & IV
Every 0DTE contract displays Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega, and implied volatility. With same-day expiration, Gamma and Theta are at their most extreme — critical data for 0DTE traders.
How to Use This 0DTE Options Dashboard
- 1
Enter a Ticker
Type any U.S. stock or ETF ticker that offers daily expirations (e.g., SPY, QQQ, IWM, AAPL, TSLA) and click "Load 0DTE Chain" to fetch today's expiring options.
- 2
Review the ATM Straddle & Most Active Strikes
Check the summary cards at the top for the ATM straddle implied move and the most actively traded strikes. These give you a quick read on market expectations and where the action is concentrated.
- 3
Analyze the Full Chain
Scroll through the calls-and-puts side-by-side table to compare bid/ask spreads, volume, open interest, IV, and Greeks across all available strikes. ITM contracts are highlighted for easy identification.
- 4
Monitor with Auto-Refresh
Leave the dashboard open and let the 15-second auto-refresh keep your data current. 0DTE premiums can change dramatically in minutes, so frequent updates are essential for timing entries and exits.
Popular 0DTE Trading Strategies
Zero-day options support a variety of trading approaches. Here are some of the most common 0DTE strategies that traders use with same-day expiring contracts:
- Directional Scalps: Buy calls or puts to capture quick intraday moves. 0DTE options offer extreme leverage due to high gamma, meaning small moves in the underlying can produce large percentage gains (or losses) in the option premium.
- Credit Spreads: Sell out-of-the-money call or put spreads to collect premium that decays rapidly throughout the day. With 0DTE, theta decay is at its maximum, benefiting premium sellers if the underlying stays within range.
- Iron Condors: Sell both a call spread and a put spread to profit from range-bound price action. The ATM straddle implied move shown on this dashboard helps you gauge whether the expected range is wide enough for your wings.
- Straddles & Strangles: Buy both a call and a put when you expect a large move but are unsure of direction. The ATM straddle price on this dashboard tells you exactly what the market is pricing in — you profit if the actual move exceeds that amount.