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What is a Credit Spread? A Simple Guide for Beginners

If you are new to options trading, you have probably heard people talk about credit spreads. They are one of the most popular strategies because they let you make money while limiting your risk. In this guide, we will explain what credit spreads are in simple terms.

What is a Credit Spread?

A credit spread is an options trade where you sell one option and buy another option at the same time. You get paid money upfront (the "credit") when you open the trade. Your goal is to keep that money when the options expire worthless.

The simple version: You collect money now and hope the stock stays in your favor. If it does, you keep the money. If it does not, you lose money (but your loss is limited).

The Two Types of Credit Spreads

1. Put Credit Spread (Bull Put Spread)

You use this when you think the stock will stay the same or go up. You sell a put option at a higher strike price and buy a put option at a lower strike price.

Example

Stock ABC is trading at $100. You think it will stay above $95.

If the stock stays above $95, both options expire worthless and you keep the $150.

2. Call Credit Spread (Bear Call Spread)

You use this when you think the stock will stay the same or go down. You sell a call option at a lower strike price and buy a call option at a higher strike price.

Example

Stock ABC is trading at $100. You think it will stay below $105.

If the stock stays below $105, both options expire worthless and you keep the $150.

Why Traders Like Credit Spreads

The Risks You Should Know

Credit spreads are not free money. Here are the risks:

How to Calculate Your Risk and Reward

Let us use the put credit spread example from earlier:

Tips for Beginners

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Summary

Credit spreads are a great way to start trading options with defined risk. You collect money upfront and profit when the stock stays on your side. Start with small positions, track your trades, and learn from each one.

Ready to learn more? Check out our guide on iron condors or learn about put options.