NIFTY Multi-Strike Chart | Live Multi-Strike Premium
The multi-strike chart for NIFTY lets you overlay the premium behaviour of several strikes on a single chart — both calls and puts, across expiries — so you can see how each strike is reacting to spot movement, theta, and changes in implied volatility. Instead of switching between individual strike charts, you get a unified view of the whole NIFTY option chain's price action in one place.
This is particularly powerful for NIFTY traders running multi-leg strategies. Watch an iron condor's four legs at once to understand real-time P/L dynamics as spot drifts toward a short strike. Track a ratio spread's break-even point by watching both strikes move together. Compare how deep-OTM vs near-ATM NIFTY calls respond to the same underlying move, and see the volatility skew reflected in premium behaviour rather than theoretical IV numbers.
Using NIFTY multi-strike data for strategy construction
Before building a NIFTY strategy, overlay the strikes you're considering on one chart and study how their premiums have moved together (or diverged) over the session — or historically. If two strikes that should move in tandem start diverging, that's often a pricing anomaly you can trade. For direction-based plays, you can quickly identify which strike gave the best risk-reward for past NIFTY moves and apply the same filter to today's setup. Live mode streams every selected NIFTY strike in real time.
Complement the multi-strike chart with our ATM Straddle, Premium Decay, and Live Option Chain tools for richer NIFTY option-market analysis on NSE.
Nifty 50 (NIFTY) Multi-Strike Chart: Live Session Patterns
Opening hour NIFTY multi-strike patterns
In the first 30 minutes after open, the Nifty 50 multi-strike chart shows the fastest premium changes. Overnight positioning unwinds and new positions establish. Watch which strikes move most — those are where the day's action is concentrated. Strikes that remain flat at open usually stay quiet through the rest of the session.
Mid-day behaviour on NIFTY
Between 11:00 AM and 1:30 PM, the multi-strike chart usually settles into steady time-decay patterns. All lines drift gradually lower as theta works. Dramatic mid-day moves are unusual and often signal important news. For Nifty 50, this quiet period is good for observing rather than acting.
Final hour dynamics on NIFTY
The last hour (2:30-3:30 PM) is when institutional orders often hit. Multi-strike lines can move sharply as large positions are adjusted. Premium differences between strikes can widen quickly. This is a high-information window for understanding next-day positioning on NIFTY.
Full-session reading of the NIFTY chart as of 15 July 2026
Take a mental snapshot of the multi-strike chart at open, midday, and close. Compare the shapes and spacings. Did any strike diverge from the others? Did the spacing widen or tighten? These session-long observations build your intuition for Nifty 50 premium dynamics.
Nifty 50 (NIFTY) Multi-Strike Chart: Intraday Rotation Patterns
What is strike rotation on NIFTY?
Strike rotation happens when the most active strike shifts during the session. At market open, one strike might be leading the action. By midday, a different strike takes over. By close, yet another strike is central. The multi-strike chart tracks this rotation visibly as line leadership changes.
Reading rotation on the NIFTY chart
When the lead strike shifts from ATM to slightly OTM, it usually means directional pressure is building in that direction. If a lower put strike starts rising while the ATM stays flat, puts are gaining attention — bearish signal. If a higher call strike rises, calls are gaining — bullish. These rotations often precede price breakouts on Nifty 50.
Why rotation matters for trade timing
Trades entered against the rotation direction usually struggle. If you are short calls and rotation is shifting toward higher call strikes, fresh bullish positioning is building and your short position is at risk. Exit or hedge before the rotation accelerates. Reading rotation gives you earlier exit signals than waiting for price to confirm.
Using rotation for entries on NIFTY as of 15 July 2026
Enter trades in the direction of the rotation when it aligns with other signals. If puts are rotating higher (bullish put writing) and price is testing support, the bullish setup has extra conviction. Combine rotation with technical levels for the cleanest trade signals.
Nifty 50 (NIFTY) Multi-Strike Chart: Best Practices
Best practice 1: check NIFTY at consistent times
Check the Nifty 50 multi-strike chart at the same 2-3 moments each day. Opening, midday, and close are natural checkpoints. Consistency builds pattern recognition — you start noticing when today looks different from a normal day. Random checking produces no such awareness.
Best practice 2: always note the volatility regime
Before interpreting any NIFTY chart pattern, classify the volatility regime. Low-vol regimes produce flat, slow charts. High-vol regimes produce active, separated lines. Each regime has its own normal patterns. Reading a chart without regime context leads to wrong conclusions.
Best practice 3: combine with at least one other signal
Never trade solely on the multi-strike chart. Combine with price action, OI data, or another indicator. The two-signal rule filters out roughly half of unreliable setups and dramatically improves your win rate on Nifty 50 trades.
Best practice 4: journal your NIFTY observations
Write down what you see each day — the chart shape, unusual patterns, your interpretation, and what happened next. Over weeks this log becomes your personal playbook. Generic advice is a starting point; your own journaled experience is what produces real skill. As of 15 July 2026, Nifty 50 multi-strike chart is most valuable to disciplined observers.

NIFTY premium comparison across strikes: quick reference
| Strike zone | Typical delta | How its premium line behaves on the overlay |
|---|---|---|
| Deep ITM | Above 0.90 | Tracks the NIFTY future almost point-for-point; flattest decay, mostly intrinsic value |
| ITM | 0.60 – 0.80 | Strong directional response to spot with modest time decay between moves |
| ATM | ~0.50 | Highest gamma and theta — the fastest-swinging and fastest-decaying line on the chart |
| OTM | 0.20 – 0.40 | Rises only on sustained trend or IV expansion; bleeds steadily when NIFTY consolidates |
| Deep OTM | Below 0.20 | Near-flat most sessions; spikes on sharp spot moves or vol events, then decays back |
Because every NIFTY strike carries a different delta, gamma, and theta mix, their premium lines never move identically — the overlay makes those differences visible. Compare each strike's actual line against the behaviour expected for its zone: a line moving out of character is often the first sign of a volatility-skew shift or a tradeable pricing anomaly.
How to use the Multi-Strike Chart
- Pick the underlying and expiry — Choose Nifty, BankNifty, or any F&O stock. Pick the expiry that holds your strikes.
- Add the strikes you want to overlay — Click strikes on the option chain or type them in. Up to 8-10 strikes can plot cleanly together.
- Choose call, put, or both — Toggle each strike between CE, PE, or both. Colour-coding makes it easy to track each line.
- Pick live or historical mode — Live for current-session monitoring. Historical for back-testing or post-mortem analysis on past trades.
- Read the divergence signals — Strikes that should move in tandem but are diverging often signal pricing anomalies or skew shifts. Both are tradeable in the right context.
NIFTY MultiStrike Chart — Frequently Asked Questions
What is NIFTY MultiStrike Chart?
NIFTY MultiStrike Chart displays multiple option strikes on a single chart, allowing you to compare price movements across different strikes simultaneously for better trading decisions.
How to use MultiStrike Chart for NIFTY?
Select multiple NIFTY strikes you want to track. Compare how different strikes react to underlying moves. Identify which strikes offer better risk-reward based on price behavior patterns.
What does it mean when two NIFTY strikes diverge on the multi-strike chart?
Divergence between NIFTY strikes that normally move in tandem usually signals a volatility-skew shift or a pricing anomaly. If an OTM put premium climbs while the ATM stays flat, put-side IV is being bid — a fear signal. Spread traders treat sustained divergence as a relative-value setup: buy the lagging strike, sell the leading one.
How many NIFTY strikes can I overlay at once?
You can overlay up to 20 NIFTY strikes simultaneously, though 5-8 strikes centred on the ATM plot most cleanly. Each line is colour-coded, and every strike can be toggled between CE, PE, or both — across weekly and monthly expiries. Deep-OTM strikes on illiquid names add noise, so stick to actively traded strikes for readable comparisons.
How often does the NIFTY multi-strike chart update?
During NSE market hours (9:15 AM to 3:30 PM IST) every selected NIFTY strike refreshes every minute from live option-price data. Outside market hours the chart shows the last traded session, and historical mode lets you replay any past NIFTY expiry to back-test how each strike behaved intraday.