Advanced Option Vega Calculator

Measure volatility impact on option value using inputs. View greeks, scaling, and scenario-ready sensitivity results. Use charts, exports, and guidance for faster evaluation today.

Calculator Inputs

Use the responsive grid below. It shows three columns on large screens, two on smaller screens, and one on mobile.

Current underlying price.
Exercise price of the option.
Annualized implied or forecast volatility.
Use 0.50 for six months.
Continuously compounded annual rate.
Continuous annual dividend yield.
Common equity option value is 100.
Used for position-level vega.
Scenario change in volatility points.
Short positions carry negative vega.
Reset

Plotly Vega Curve

The chart shows how vega per 1% volatility move changes as volatility changes, while all other inputs stay fixed.

Formula Used

Black-Scholes-Merton d1
d1 = [ ln(S / K) + (r - q + 0.5σ²)T ] / [ σ√T ]
Option Vega
Vega = S × e-qT × N'(d1) × √T
Per 1% Volatility Change
Vega per 1% = Vega × 0.01
Position Vega
Position Vega per 1% = Vega per 1% × Contract Multiplier × Contracts × Position Sign

Variable meanings

Under this model, call and put options share the same vega when all other inputs are identical.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the current spot price and the strike price.
  2. Input annualized volatility as a percentage.
  3. Enter time to expiry in years, not days.
  4. Add the risk-free rate and dividend yield as annual percentages.
  5. Set the contract multiplier and number of contracts for position sizing.
  6. Choose long or short to apply the correct sign to position vega.
  7. Enter a volatility shift to estimate the resulting premium change.
  8. Press Calculate Vega to display results above the form.

Example Data Table

These examples help you compare how time, moneyness, and volatility affect vega.

Scenario Spot Strike Volatility % Time Rate % Yield % Multiplier Contracts Vega / 1% Position Vega / 1%
ATM Index Contract 100.00 100.00 20.00 0.50 5.00 1.00 100 2 0.2744 54.8886
Slightly OTM Contract 120.00 130.00 28.00 0.75 4.00 0.50 100 1 0.4110 41.0957
Longer Dated Position 250.00 220.00 35.00 1.20 6.00 2.00 50 3 0.8633 129.5019
Near Expiry Contract 80.00 80.00 18.00 0.10 3.00 0.00 100 5 0.1006 50.2967

FAQs

1) What does option vega measure?

Option vega measures how much an option’s price changes when implied volatility changes by one percentage point, assuming all other pricing inputs stay constant.

2) Why is vega the same for calls and puts?

In the Black-Scholes-Merton framework, calls and puts with identical spot, strike, time, rate, yield, and volatility share the same vega because volatility affects both prices symmetrically.

3) When is vega usually highest?

Vega is often highest for at-the-money options with more time remaining. These contracts are usually most sensitive to changes in implied volatility.

4) Does longer expiry always increase vega?

Longer-dated options often have larger vega, but the exact value also depends on moneyness, dividend yield, and volatility. Time helps, but it is not the only driver.

5) What does vega per 1% mean?

It shows the estimated option price change for a one-point move in volatility, such as from 20% to 21%, rather than a full 1.00 change.

6) Why does position side matter?

A long option position has positive vega, so rising volatility helps. A short option position has negative vega, so rising volatility hurts.

7) Do interest rates and dividend yield affect vega?

Yes. Rates and yield influence forward pricing, discounting, and d1. Their effect is usually smaller than time, moneyness, and volatility, but it still matters.

8) Is this calculator exact for American options?

No. This calculator uses the Black-Scholes-Merton approach, which is best aligned with European-style assumptions. American options may need a different pricing model.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.