Lesson 01 · Foundations

What is options trading?

Options sound complicated, but the core idea is simple: a contract that gives you a choice. Here’s what that choice is — and why traders pay for it.

6 min read Beginner Free to read
The core idea

What is an option?

An option is a financial contract that gives the buyer the right — but not the obligation — to buy or sell an asset at a set price within a set window of time.

That single distinction is what makes options different from simply owning a stock. You’re not committing to a trade; you’re paying a small amount to reserve a choice. If the market moves your way, you use it. If it doesn’t, you can walk away — your loss is limited to what you paid.

Options trade on stocks, indexes, commodities and more. Whatever the underlying asset, every option falls into one of two basic types: a call or a put.

Option types

Calls and puts

The two types mirror the two directions a market can move. A call is a bet — or a position — for prices rising; a put is for prices falling. Master these two and you have the building blocks for every strategy that follows.

Call · right to buy

Call options

A call gives you the right to buy an asset at a set price. Traders use calls when they believe the price will rise.

Buy a $50 call. Stock climbs to $60 → you still buy at $50 and capture the difference.
Put · right to sell

Put options

A put gives you the right to sell an asset at a set price. Traders use puts when they expect the price to fall — or to protect what they own.

Hold a $50 put. Stock drops to $40 → you still sell at $50, locking in the higher price.
See it in action

A worked example

Say you buy a call option on a stock with a strike price of $100, expiring in 30 days, and pay a premium of $5 per share. The premium is your cost — and the most you can lose. Drag the stock price below to see how your outcome changes at expiration.

Long call · payoff at expiration

Your profit & loss

Strike $100 Premium $5 Breakeven $105
Stock price
$110
Profit / loss
+$5
Status
In the money
Above breakeven

This is a simplified view of a long call. It shows the payoff at expiration only — in real positions, time decay, implied volatility, dividends, interest rates, and trading costs all move the option’s value before then. We cover those forces in later lessons.

Below $100 the option expires worthless and you lose only the $5 premium. Between $100 and $105 you recover part of that premium. Above $105 — your breakeven — every further dollar is profit. That asymmetry, capped loss with open-ended upside, is the heart of why options appeal to traders.

How it works

The anatomy of an option

Every option contract is defined by three numbers. Once you can read these three, you can read any option quote — they are the foundation everything else is built on.

01 / Strike

Strike price

The agreed price at which the asset can be bought (for a call) or sold (for a put) under the contract.

02 / Expiry

Expiration date

The deadline. Options have a time limit, after which the contract expires and any remaining value is gone.

03 / Premium

Premium

The price you pay to hold the option — the cost of securing your reservation, and the most a buyer can lose.

There’s more under the hood. Forces like delta, gamma, and the split between intrinsic and extrinsic value shape an option’s price too — we cover those in later lessons. Strike, expiry and premium are simply the place to start.

The appeal

Why traders use options

Options offer three things that owning a stock outright can’t — but each comes with a trade-off. The premium you pay can be lost entirely if the market doesn’t move your way, so every position is a deliberate choice.

Risk management

Options can act like insurance. A protective put locks in a minimum selling price for stock you own — cushioning a downturn while you keep the upside.

Flexibility

The right strategy can profit whether the market rises, falls, or trades sideways — far more directions than simply being long or short a stock.

Leverage

A relatively small premium can control a large amount of stock — amplifying potential gains, and why position sizing matters so much.

Your next move

Where to go next

Options can seem complex, but the basics you’ve just covered — a contract that grants a choice, priced by a strike, an expiry, and a premium — are the foundation everything else builds on. From here, three simple steps will take you from understanding to doing:

Before your first trade
  • Get the language down. Work through the terminology lesson so quotes and the Greeks stop looking like a foreign alphabet.
  • Pick the right broker. Choose a platform with strong educational resources and beginner-friendly tools.
  • Start small. Trade modest size first to build experience without risking more than you can afford to lose.

Risk in options trading

Options trading carries inherent risks, including the potential for significant losses due to market volatility and leverage. The content in this library is educational and is not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. It’s essential to understand these risks and approach options trading with a well-informed, well-managed strategy — and to never risk more than you can afford to lose.