3 Option Strategies✅ 1. 0-DTE Iron Fly (ATM Iron Butterfly)
The 0-DTE Iron Fly — selling an at-the-money straddle and buying wings for protection — is the most powerful theta-harvesting strategy in same-day options trading. Its core edge derives from the extraordinary rate of time decay at the money. ATM options experience the fastest gamma and theta changes, and within hours of expiration, their value collapses dramatically if price remains relatively stable.
An iron fly sells both the ATM call and ATM put, while purchasing further OTM wings to cap risk. This creates a defined-risk straddle, turning unlimited risk into a predictable maximum loss. Because you are collecting the highest premium on the chain (the ATM options), this strategy often yields 3–20× more credit than bull put spreads.
Professionals use iron flies on days where the market is expected to consolidate, remain rangebound, or collapse in implied volatility. The setup excels after large overnight moves, strong gap opens, or major news the previous day. These conditions often produce morning chop followed by volatility compression — the exact environment that crushes ATM premiums.
Key Greek behavior defines this strategy’s edge. The position is delta-neutral, vega-negative, and theta-maximizing. A neutral delta means you’re not betting directionally — any sideways action generates rapid profit. The negative vega means falling IV immediately boosts your P&L, and the extraordinarily high theta means the position decays in your favor every minute, especially after 11 AM ET.
However, gamma is the double-edged sword. ATM options have the highest gamma, meaning price moving too far too fast can rapidly eat into the credit and even create maximum loss conditions. For this reason, institutional traders manage iron flies aggressively using time-based exits, gamma stops, and dynamic hedging using micro futures (MES, ES, or SPX futures). They often hedge intraday with small futures positions to flatten delta.
A well-built iron fly has wings positioned at 15–30 delta, balancing risk and credit. The payoff is largest when price finishes near the ATM strike. Closing early—especially when you’ve captured 40–70% of the total credit—is standard practice. The trade is almost always exited before 2:00 PM ET to avoid the “gamma death zone,” where even minor price moves cause large swings.
Iron flies are best for traders with mechanical discipline, strong understanding of intraday volatility patterns, and the ability to manage delta quickly. When executed correctly in calm or mean-reverting markets, the iron fly is the most profitable theta-capture strategy in the entire 0-DTE universe.
Why it’s the best?
Highest theta concentration (ATM options decay the fastest).
Very tight structure → excellent gamma control.
Collects huge premium → offsets intraday noise.
You can define risk precisely.
When to use?
Low–moderate volatility mornings
Rangebound price action
Strong liquidity in SPX, narrow bid–ask
Typical setup:
Sell ATM call + ATM put
Buy wings ±15–30 points
Hold 1–2 hours, manage delta
Stats:
Win rate often 60–75%
Avg R:R 1:0.6 to 1:0.8
Excellent for consistency
✅ 2. 0-DTE Bull Put Spread (BPS)
The Bull Put Spread is the highest-probability and most stable 0-DTE income strategy used by SPX and XSP premium sellers. It involves selling a put that is out of the money and simultaneously buying another put further OTM to define risk. Its primary advantage lies in its exposure to positive theta, negative vega, and controlled gamma, making it ideal for days with orderly price action or bullish-to-neutral drift.
The core principle behind the bull put spread is simple: markets typically spend more time drifting upward or sideways than collapsing. 0-DTE options lose value extremely fast, particularly out-of-the-money options. By selling a 22–26 delta put and buying a 15–17 delta put, you position yourself in the zone where time decay works aggressively in your favor, and where IV crush after the open exponentially increases your probability of profit.
Professional traders rely on several metrics to select the correct strikes. First, the delta ratio between the short and long legs should be between 1.45–1.70. This ensures you're collecting enough premium for the risk while keeping gamma manageable. Next, the short-leg gamma must remain below threshold (0.045 for XSP, 0.015 for SPX), preventing sudden P&L swings late in the session. You also want net vega negative, so falling implied volatility benefits your trade, and net theta positive, so time decay improves your position.
Volume profile, expected move, skew, and opening volatility conditions guide entry timing. The best window tends to be 9:50–10:20 AM ET, after the initial volatility shock has normalized. Avoid entering during major macro events (CPI, FOMC, NFP), as volatility expansion can instantly destroy the probability structure.
You profit if price stays above your short put strike at expiration. Even if price moves downward slightly, the speed of decay can still allow you to win. Risk is strictly defined by the width of the spread, typically 3–5 points in XSP and 30–50 points in SPX. This creates a predictable maximum loss and controlled exposure.
Profit-taking is straightforward: close the spread when it's worth 5 cents or less, or when you’ve captured 70–90% of max profit. Stop out if the spread doubles in value relative to your credit (e.g., enter for $0.30, stop at $0.60). Always exit entirely by 3:32 PM ET to avoid gamma slingshot behavior.
Overall, the bull put spread is the most consistent 0-DTE strategy, with typical win rates between 75–90%, depending on strike selection. It is ideal for traders looking for systematic, repeatable edge without needing to predict market direction — only that markets won’t collapse that day.
Why it works?
Markets drift upward intraday statistically.
Keeps positive theta + directional bias.
When to use?
ES/NQ bullish open
SPX trending strong
VIX < 17
Breadth strong (AD line positive)
Typical setup:
Short put at 5–15 delta
Long put 20–30 points lower
Risk-defined, easy to automate
Stats:
Win rate 80–90% in bullish days
Low stress
Great for small accounts
✅ 3. 0-DTE Broken Wing Butterfly (BWB)
The Broken Wing Butterfly is the most advanced and nuanced 0-DTE strategy, offering asymmetric risk, low cost, and powerful edge during high-volatility or directional days. A BWB is essentially a skewed iron fly or skewed butterfly where one wing is placed further away, creating a structure with higher reward than risk or even a no-debit or credit-based butterfly.
A typical bullish BWB sells two ATM or slightly OTM puts, buys a closer lower put, and buys a further lower put several strikes away. This creates a payoff profile where the middle strike yields the highest profit, but losing scenarios are heavily controlled. The beauty of the BWB is that you can collect credit while still having a buffer zone and minimizing tail risk.
Unlike the bull put spread or iron fly, the broken wing butterfly shines in volatile markets. It's designed to handle one-directional moves, strong intraday drops, or large opens. When skew is elevated — especially put skew — the far-out wing becomes cheap, allowing you to build the structure for little or no cost. This skew is what gives BWBs institutional appeal: they exploit uneven pricing in the options chain created by market fear.
Key features include moderate gamma, moderate theta, and mildly negative vega. Although not as theta-rich as iron flies or as high-probability as bull put spreads, BWBs offer something neither of those provide: asymmetric opportunity. You risk less than you can make, while still benefiting from IV crush and directional drift.
Professionals place BWBs based on expected move, skew, and opening momentum. A bullish BWB is ideal when price is expected to drift upward or when volatility is high enough that selling ATM premium is too dangerous. It provides better tail risk management than credit spreads and avoids the unlimited risk of naked options.
Management rules revolve around maintaining delta, controlling gamma, and monitoring whether price migrates toward the tent peak. Traders often take profits early if price stalls near the short strike or begins to threaten the near wing. If price collapses rapidly, a BWB tends to hold up far better than a credit spread, because the long wing absorbs much of the gamma and Vega shock.
The BWB becomes exceptionally powerful when structured for zero debit, creating a free “lottery ticket” with hedged downside. Many traders use multiples—layering BWBs at different levels—to build a volatility-weighted directional profile.
In high volatility, trending, or one-directional markets, the broken wing butterfly is the best risk-adjusted strategy, offering safety, optionality, and strong skew exploitation.
Why this is sleeper-OP?
Collects more credit than risk (asymmetry).
Handles violent intraday moves better than iron fly.
Still benefits from fast theta burn.
When to use?
VIX severe > 20
ES/NQ whipsaw
FOMC days, CPI, NFP
Big macro catalyst days
Typical setup:
Sell ATM short strikes
One wing close
One wing far out
Net credit > max loss
Stats:
Win rate 50–70%
Best for tail-risk adjusted returns.
⭐ Which one is best overall?
If you want consistency:
→ 0-DTE Iron Fly
If you want safest risk-defined trending play:
→ 0-DTE Bull Put Spread
If you want best payout on volatile days:
→ 0-DTE Broken Wing Butterfly
Brokenwingbutterfly
Opening (IRA): TSLA March 21st 305/2x315/320 BWB*... for a 1.25 credit.
Comments: I don't do these very often, but decided to putz with one here. The setup consists of two parts -- a long put vertical (the -315P/320P) and a short put vertical (the 305P/-315P), one of which is wider than the other. I wrapped it around the 30 delta/expected move strike at the 315 and erected wings out from there.
Although the ROC at max is sexy and alluring, it is illusory, since it would require a finish between the break even at 308.75 and 315 which is a fairly small landing pad when you've launched your rocket from 38 days out in time. Consequently, you generally want to look to take profit either at 50% max of the credit received or for something decent, but far less than the max if presented with the opportunity.
From a trade management standpoint, these generally work or they don't, although I will consider rolling up the 305 put to the 310, assuming I get an opportunity to do so for a debit that is less than the credit received. This would convert the setup into a "free fly," since both wings would be of the same width (i.e., the max loss of the short put vertical would be equal to the max loss of the long put vertical).
Metrics:
Max Profit: 6.25
Max Loss/Buying Power Effect: 3.75
ROC at Max: 167%
Break Even: 308.75/share
* -- Broken wing butterfly.
Opening (Margin): SPX January 17th 3705/2 x 3735/3755 BWB*... for a 1.45 credit.
Comments: Doing something a little bit funky here for me, targeting the current zero gamma level at around 3935 with my short options and erecting my longs out from there.
Metrics: 1.45 credit on buying power effect of 8.55 with a max profit potential of 21.45. Delta 1.18; theta 4.46. A "perfect landing" would be at 3735 at expiry, but will take profit quickly if the opportunity presents itself. (Hitting a "perfect landing" is extremely rare, since it needs to be right at short put strikes right at expiry).
* -- Broken wing butterfly. The 3705/3735 side is narrower than the 3735/3755 side to create a profit zone without any upside risk.
GME 21/24/28 Broken-Wing Put ButterflyRange-Bound Pullback Set-Up:
Since about early September GME has been range bound between 29 and 24. The entire market was down for the month of September, yet this traded range bound in this area. But towards the end of September, it tightened it's range bound between 27 and 24 and trending lower at a slow pace. With the big green day we had in the markets Thursday after CPI and another green day on Friday, this really didn't move as much. If the range is getting tighter and trending lower, we could be setting up to head lower in the 21-24 range. Which is why I had the idea of a Broken Wing Put Butterfly which can work great in these range bound set ups.
In order for me to put this trade on, I need to see this trade below were today's candle ends up. Because as of now, it's looking like a reversal candle at the area of resistance. So I'll have to check this tomorrow before executing my trade. As far as stops, I'll be position sizing with max loss. If the market decides to head higher the rest of this month and GME decides to follow the general market, this could make it's way back to another resistance point of 29ish. If by the end of this week it gets to 29, I'll want to see a reversal candle at 29, before I decide to get back in another trade.
Trade Set-Up:
No trend. It's making relatively equal highs/lows. The 20-day & 50-day SMA's are flattening out as well. I've established that resistances for this particular trade idea is 27 and support at 24. This small rally has brought the stock back up to resistance level and a reversal candle is currently forming.
T.E.S.T.
Timeframe: 3 weeks. I'll have a December 2nd expiration date.
Entry: If this trades below todays possible reversal candle, my entry will be right around 26.
Stop: I'll be positioned for max loss.
Target: My target is 24.
Profit Score:
Potential- 2
ATR- 2.18
Score- 0.92
Stock Outlook: 0 to -1
Trade Breakdown:
Chart Set-up is Range-Bound and consolidating.
Entry: I'm going to sell the December 2nd 24 strike and buy the December 28 and 21 strike. There are no earnings scheduled until December 14th so stable volume is anticipated.
Position Sizing: This should be a Net Debit of about 3.10ish by tomorrow if it does fall to 26 tomorrow. I'll be setting up for max loss and only risking 2% of my portfolio.
Trade Management: A week before this expires expires I will analyze the trade to determine if I should close out the position before expiring. If this falls below 24 before December 2nd and looks like it wants to run back up to 24, I might want to hold this to expiration to close out near the apex of the trade.
IWM Update: 28 AprilThe Russell is approaching a potential target zone. In this video I share an idea how to trade it with a Broken Wing Butterfly that will benefit from time decay during a potential re-accumulation. It has defined risk in case the selloff continues, and no upside risk in case the bounce happens earlier or is faster than anticipated.
Closed (IRA): SPX May 6th 4110/2 x 4210/4260 BWB*... for a 2.20 debit via a good until cancelled order to take profit at 50% max.
Comments: In for 4.40 (See Post Below), out for a 2.20 ($220) profit with 16 days to go. 4.8% ROC as a function of buying power effect. Still have a May 20th 4100/2 x 4200/4250 on.
* -- Broken Wing Butterfly
Opening (IRA): SPX May 6th 4110/2 x 4210/4260 BWB*... for a 4.40 credit.
Comments: I would like IV to be higher and SPX to be weaker, but can't have everything. Selling the 20's and erecting my longs out from there. 4.40 credit on buying power effect of 45.60; 9.6% ROC at max 4.8% at 50% max.
Will generally look to take profit at 50% max, but will also look to manage the two aspects of this setup (a short put vertical credit spread and a long put vertical debit spread) if the opportunity presents itself.
* -- Broken Wing Butterfly.
Trade Idea: SPX May 6th 4025/2 x 4125/4175 Broken Wing ButterflyIn previous market environments, my go-to strategy in SPX was the short put vertical, but if you've been around the past several weeks and had those on, you probably did a bit of sweating as price moved into the spread, took some loss on those that were fully in the money (only to scream as price whipped back the other way), and or wished that you had a setup on that you could play "elevator up/down" with.
Pictured here is an alternative strategy that is mildly net delta long, has positive theta, will beneficially benefit from a move into the butterfly's "body," and has similar ROC metrics as the 16 delta short leg spreads I ran previously -- the "broken wing" butterfly.
Here are the metrics for this setup, which I set up by selling 2 x the 20 delta's and then erecting my longs out from there:
Max Loss/Buying Power Effect: 45.00 ($4500) (Realized on a finish below the break even)
Max Profit: 55.00 ($5500) (Realized on a finish at the short put strike where intrinsic in all the legs converges on 0)
Credit Received: 5.00
Break Even: 4070* (No Upside Risk)
Probability of Profit: 87%
Delta/Theta: 1.88/7.20
ROC as a Function of Buying Power Effect: 5.00/45.00 = 11.1% at max; 5.6% at 50% max.
From a trade management standpoint, you will generally put these on as a unit and take them off as it unit, with the vast majority of take profits at 50% max since it will be extremely rare that you get a "finish" right at the body of the setup (i.e., 4125 with 0 days to go) and either aspect's converging on max generally won't occur until very late in the trade's cycle.
However, if you do get a move such that the long put vertical aspect (1 x 4125 short put/4175 long put) converges on max (50.00), you'll want to look to strip that aspect off, since that is the most you can make on it, either allowing the remaining short put vertical to "ride" or rolling it out for a credit. Similarly, if the short put vertical aspect (4025 long put/1 x 4125 short put) converges on max (0.00), you'll want to look to strip that aspect off, since that will be the max you'll be able to make on that aspect, then allowing the long put vertical aspect to ride. At that point, the remainder of your setup will be "risk free" since the risk in this setup is in the short put vertical aspect.
I'll look to piddle with one of these setups next week during my regular Friday routine and will post the trade if I get filled.
* -- Short put strike (4125) minus the width of the narrowest wing (50) minus the credit received (5.00).
OPENING (IRA): SPY NOVEMBER 20TH DOUBLE BROKEN WING BUTTERFLYI'm probably sticking this out there in too lengthy of a duration relative to the binary event I'm looking to play, but wanted to post it in the event I space the play out.
Pictured here is a double 4 x 2 broken wing butterfly. Due to its being an 8-leg position, I legged into the put side for a .35 credit and then into the call side for a .34 credit, for a total of .69.
Here are the metrics for the put side: max profit: 2.65, max loss: 1.65, with no upside risk. If price finishes above all three strikes (i.e., everything approaches worthless), I keep the credit received. Max profit is realized on a finish at the short put body at 302.
And for the call: max profit: 2.34, max loss: 1.66, with no downside risk. Similarly, if price finishes below all three strikes, I keep the credit received, with max profit being realized on a finish at the short call body at 351. The oppositional side is put on essentially "buying power free," so I got into the play for 1.66 of buying power with total credits received of .69, so if price just slops around between the short option legs, the profit potential is 41.5% ROC at max.
If the general elections turn out to be a "nothing burger," I'm fine with that, but am looking to take advantage of substantial movement to either side in the event it turns out not to be, either in run-up jitters or thereafter.
TRADE IDEA: XRT JAN 17TH 43/46/47 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLYA seasonality play in retail at long-term range rows with a break even below mid-range ... . Markets are wide here in the after hours, so may have to do some price discovery to get a fill.
Metrics:
Max Profit: $181/contract
Max Loss/Buying Power Effect: $19/contract
Break Even: 43.19
Delta/Theta: 5.55/-.09
OPENING: SPY MAY 17TH 278/280/284 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLY... for an .89/contract credit.
Metrics:
Max Profit: $289/contract
Max Loss: $111/contract
Break Even: 282.89 (no downside risk)
Delta: -6.75
Theta: .41
Notes: Taking a small directional shot at/near horizontal resistance with a risk 1 to make greater than 2 setup ... . Will start to look to take profit at 25% max (.73/$73).
OPENING: SPY DEC 21ST 272/2 X 274/279 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLY... for a .43/contract credit.
Notes: Selling premium buying power free (because I have a put butterfly of the same width on; see Post Below) and to pick up some short delta in my SPY core position running into December opex. It probably only makes sense as an adjustment trade and not as a stand-alone ... .
TRADE IDEA: SPY DEC 21ST 256/2X261/263 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLYMetrics:
Probability of Profit: 75%
Max Profit: 2.50/contract
Max Loss: 2.50/contract
Break Even: 258.50
Delta: 3.59
Theta: .43
Notes: Looking to add some small long delta to my SPY core position.
Unlike short puts or short put verticals, this setup will actually benefit from price moving in toward the setup. Although max profit is realized on a "pin" to the short put strike at 261 at expiry (a virtual unlikelihood no matter what universe you're living in and how much hopium you're smoking), I'm just looking at it as a "risk one to make one," high probability of profit hedge that I'll take off when it's no longer needed and/or starting at 20% max (.50 -- which is the credit I hope to get filled for).
OPENING: TLT NOV 16TH 112/2X114/115 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLY... for a .71/contract debit. Small bet that treasury sell-off is overdone here and/or there will be some risk-off running into mid-term elections.
Metrics:
Probability of Profit: 51%
Max Profit: 1.29/contract
Max Loss: .71/contract
Break Even: 112.71 (no downside risk)
Notes: Will begin to look at taking the entire setup off as a unit at 25% max. You can also look to strip off aspects of the setup, with the ideal goal being to get what remains for free (e.g., strip off the short call aspect at or near what you paid for the entire setup, allow the long call vert aspect to "ride").
OPENING: OIH JUNE 16TH 24/27/27/28 BROKEN WING BUTTERFLYA slight variation on a Super Bull (short put vertical financing a long put vertical; bullish assumption).
Metrics:
POP%: 71%
Max Profit: 1.12/contract
Max Loss/BPE: 1.88/contract
Break Even: 25.88
Notes: There are a couple of different ways to work this intratrade: (a) take the long put vert off in profit, leave the short put vert to ride; (b) the inverse of that; or (c) look to take it off as a unit. Here, I'll be shooting for 50% max and to take the entire thing off as a unit, but will also watch for opportunities. Filled for a .12 credit, by the way ... . Generally, this isn't my go-to instrument (XOP is more liquid), but I'm working a trade in XOP and don't want to step on that setup.
IWM Broken Wing ButterflyTaking advantage of a little IV in the Russell with a Put BWB.
Trade Setup:
-1 IWM Mar 17 134/136/136/137 Put Butterfly @ 0.18
DTE: 31
Max Win: $118
Max Loss: $82
Breakeven: $134.82
Trade Management: I will look to take 50% off this trade if we come down to $136.00 in the upcoming cycle, so around $59. If the market decides to crash, I am comfortable with the risk in the trade. I would likely take of the winning put side of this strategy and roll out the short put side for more premium, if that was the case.
Because of the structure of this trade, you will see that this trade has $0 upside risk and will in fact, end up with a max of $18 win if the options expire worthless. We will see if we get there.
Green is profit zone; vertical bar is expiration.






















