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Bull Put Spread · Credit

Bull Put Spread

A bull put spread is also bullish but built for a credit: you sell a higher-strike put and buy a lower-strike put. You collect the premium up front an…

Bull Put Spread

Bets on a rise or sideways move while collecting a credit.

Payoff diagram ▲ profit▼ loss┊ breakeven

Curve at expiration · dashed line = breakeven · gold ticks = strikes

What it is

A bull put spread is also bullish but built for a credit: you sell a higher-strike put and buy a lower-strike put. You collect the premium up front and want the underlying to stay above the short strike.

How to set it up

When to use it

Use it when you expect a rise or simply no fall. Being a credit trade, time works in your favor: if nothing happens, the premium is yours.

Worked example

With the example values already loaded in the calculator above, this strategy returns:

Net result at entry+ $ 2.00 (credit)
Max profit$ 2.00
Max loss− $ 3.00
Breakeven53.00

The numbers above come from the same engine as the calculator — change the fields to see your own scenario.

Risks and things to watch

The max loss is the strike width minus the credit, and happens if the underlying drops below K2. The breakeven is the short strike minus the credit (K1 − premium).

Frequently asked questions

Why collect a premium instead of buying a call?

With a credit trade you profit even if the underlying stays flat — it just has to stay above the short strike. A naked call needs a real rise to beat time decay.

Where is the breakeven?

At the short put strike minus the credit received. Above it you keep the max profit; below it the result erodes toward the max loss.

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