RELIANCE Option Chain - Live & Historical OI & Greeks
View live and historical RELIANCE option chain with real-time prices, open interest, volume, and Greeks. Switch to Historical Mode to replay past data for any trading date. Track all strikes and expiries in one place.
Reliance Industries Ltd (RELIANCE) Option Chain: Column Settings and Pro Tips
Full number vs short number display in the RELIANCE chain
The RELIANCE option chain supports two number formats. Short format shows values like "5L" for 5 lakh or "2K" for 2 thousand — compact and fast to scan when you have many strikes visible. Full format shows the exact value like "5,00,000" — more precise but takes more screen space. For active intraday traders monitoring several strikes simultaneously, short format is preferable. For detailed analysis where exact counts matter, full format gives cleaner reads. Toggle between them based on what you are doing.
Recommended column layouts for different trading styles
For intraday scalping on RELIANCE: enable OI, OI Change, LTP, Buildup, and Volume. These five columns give you fast-moving sentiment signals. For swing trading: add IV, IV Change, and Greeks (Delta, Theta). These help with entry timing and strike selection for multi-day holds. For analysis only: enable all columns including PCR, Volume PCR, Vol/OI, Intrinsic Value, Time Value, and Open HL. This gives the complete picture of Reliance Industries Ltd's option landscape. The column settings are saved per session, so you can customise the RELIANCE chain for your trading style.
Sorting and pinning summary rows
The RELIANCE option chain allows sorting by any column — click a column header to sort. Sorting by OI quickly shows you the most loaded strikes. Sorting by OI Change shows the most active strikes today. Sorting by Volume reveals where the highest trading activity is concentrated. The summary rows (ITM Total, OTM Total, Total) can be pinned to the top of the RELIANCE chain, giving you running totals that are always visible as you scroll through strikes. Pinned totals are especially useful for tracking Reliance Industries Ltd's aggregate OI changes in real-time.
Pro tips for getting the most from the RELIANCE option chain
Tip 1: Watch the Rank badges — they instantly highlight the most important strikes without scanning every row. Tip 2: Use the chart button at each strike's LTP to study intraday premium behaviour. Tip 3: Compare PCR and Volume PCR — divergence between them signals a potential sentiment shift. Tip 4: On expiry day, enable Gamma and monitor it at ATM strikes — high Gamma warns of explosive premium moves. Tip 5: Use Historical Mode to study Reliance Industries Ltd's option chain from 3-5 days before major past events. You will start recognising OI patterns that repeat. For Reliance Industries Ltd as a Energy stock, combine option chain insights with sector-level flows for best results. Effective as of 11 July 2026.
Reliance Industries Ltd (RELIANCE) Option Chain: PCR (Put-Call Ratio) at Each Strike
What is PCR in the RELIANCE option chain?
PCR stands for Put-Call Ratio. In the RELIANCE option chain, it is shown in the centre column next to each strike price. The strike-level PCR is calculated by dividing put OI by call OI at that specific strike. A PCR of 2.0 means there is twice as much put OI as call OI at that strike — heavy put writing, indicating strong support. A PCR of 0.3 means call OI is more than 3x put OI — heavy call writing, indicating strong resistance. The overall PCR for Reliance Industries Ltd (total put OI / total call OI across all strikes) is shown in the summary.
How to interpret RELIANCE PCR for trading
For Reliance Industries Ltd, a total PCR above 1.0 is generally considered bullish — it means more puts are written than calls, and put sellers (usually sophisticated participants) are confident that RELIANCE will hold above current support levels. A PCR below 0.7 signals bearish sentiment — call sellers dominate, capping the upside. For Reliance Industries Ltd stock options, PCR can be more volatile due to lower participation, so combine it with other signals.
What is Volume PCR and how it differs from OI PCR
The RELIANCE option chain shows both PCR (based on OI) and Volume PCR (based on today's trading volume). OI PCR reflects cumulative positioning — slower moving, better for swing trades. Volume PCR reflects today's sentiment only — faster moving, better for intraday decisions. When both agree (both above 1.0 or both below 0.7), the signal is strong. When they diverge — say OI PCR is 1.2 but Volume PCR is 0.6 — it means today's activity contradicts the overall positioning. This divergence in Reliance Industries Ltd often signals a potential shift in sentiment that hasn't fully shown up in OI yet.
Using strike-level PCR to map RELIANCE's expected range
Scan the PCR column across strikes in the RELIANCE option chain. Strikes where PCR transitions from above 1.0 (below the current price — put dominated, support) to below 1.0 (above the current price — call dominated, resistance) mark the equilibrium zone. This zone often predicts where Reliance Industries Ltd will settle near expiry. Strikes with PCR above 3.0 are very strong support floors. Strikes with PCR below 0.2 are formidable ceilings. Map these extreme-PCR strikes to quickly define the RELIANCE trading range without any additional tools.
Reliance Industries Ltd (RELIANCE) Option Chain: Live Mode vs Historical Mode
What is Live Mode in the RELIANCE option chain?
Live Mode shows real-time RELIANCE option data that updates every second during market hours (9:15 AM - 3:30 PM IST). Every column — OI, OI Change, Volume, LTP, IV, Greeks, Buildup, PCR — refreshes as trades happen. The Reliance Industries Ltd chain in Live Mode is your primary tool during trading hours. You can see exactly where OI is building, which strikes are being traded, and how premiums are moving. For Reliance Industries Ltd, live data captures both institutional and retail activity.
What is Historical Mode and why you need it
Historical Mode lets you replay the RELIANCE option chain as it appeared on any past trading date. You select a date and expiry, and the chain shows the exact OI, premiums, IV, and Greeks from that day. This is invaluable for: backtesting your analysis framework against actual past data, studying how OI built up before major Reliance Industries Ltd moves, understanding how premiums behaved around past events, and learning what signals worked and which failed. Historical mode turns the RELIANCE option chain into a training simulator.
Switching expiries in the RELIANCE option chain
The RELIANCE option chain lets you switch between different expiry dates. Reliance Industries Ltd typically has monthly expiry options available. Always compare OI across expiries. If the current expiry shows resistance at a strike but the next month shows support at a higher level, it reveals a short-term vs medium-term divergence. The expiry selector in the RELIANCE chain makes this cross-expiry comparison quick and easy.
Previous Day comparison and Time Cycle in the RELIANCE chain
The RELIANCE option chain includes a previous-day comparison feature (Time Cycle). This overlays yesterday's OI data on today's, so you can instantly see how positioning has changed overnight. If a strike had 50 lakh OI yesterday and shows 55 lakh today, 5 lakh contracts were added — fresh positioning. If it dropped to 45 lakh, 5 lakh were closed. This comparison is more intuitive than just reading OI Change numbers because you see the before-and-after side by side. For Reliance Industries Ltd, comparing today vs yesterday reveals which levels institutions are defending versus abandoning.

Option Chain: Video Walkthrough
RELIANCE option chain OI: quick reference
| OI signal in the chain | Where to look | What it means for RELIANCE |
|---|---|---|
| Highest Call OI | Strike above spot with peak call OI | Key resistance; expected ceiling before expiry |
| Highest Put OI | Strike below spot with peak put OI | Key support; expected floor before expiry |
| Rising Call OI (+ Chg OI) | Call side of a strike | Fresh call writing; resistance building at that level |
| Rising Put OI (+ Chg OI) | Put side of a strike | Fresh put writing; support building at that level |
| Falling Call OI (− Chg OI) | Call side unwinding | Short covering; resistance weakening, upside room |
| Falling Put OI (− Chg OI) | Put side unwinding | Support being pulled; downside risk rising |
Read these from the live chain's OI and change-in-OI (Chg OI) columns. The widest Call and Put OI clusters bracket the expected RELIANCE range for the expiry, while the Chg OI column tells you whether a level is being reinforced or unwound. OI concentration can shift through the session, so re-check the chain as expiry approaches.
How to use the StockMojo Option Chain
- Pick a symbol — Type or select Nifty, BankNifty, FinNifty, or any F&O stock in the symbol search at the top.
- Choose your expiry — Use the expiry dropdown to switch between weekly and monthly contracts. The current week is selected by default.
- Identify the ATM strike — Find the highlighted at-the-money strike — this is your reference point for reading OI and IV across the chain.
- Scan OI and Change in OI — Look for strikes with the highest call OI (resistance) and put OI (support). Check Change in OI to see where new positions are being built right now.
- Cross-reference with Max Pain and PCR tools — Open Max Pain and Put Call Ratio in adjacent tabs to confirm whether the OI picture aligns with broader sentiment.
RELIANCE Option Chain — Frequently Asked Questions
How to read RELIANCE option chain?
The RELIANCE option chain shows all available options with their strike prices, premiums, open interest and volume. Calls are on the left, puts on the right. High OI at a strike indicates strong support/resistance. Use the chain to analyze market sentiment and plan your trades.
What is RELIANCE open interest in option chain?
Open Interest (OI) in RELIANCE option chain shows total outstanding contracts at each strike. Rising OI with rising price = bullish (long buildup). Rising OI with falling price = bearish (short buildup). Concentration of Put OI suggests support, Call OI suggests resistance.
Which strike to buy in RELIANCE options?
For RELIANCE options, ATM strikes have highest theta decay but most responsive to price moves. ITM options cost more but have less time decay risk. OTM options are cheaper but need larger moves. Consider your trade duration, risk tolerance and view strength when selecting strikes.
Can I view historical option chain data for RELIANCE?
Yes, switch to Historical Mode to view past RELIANCE option chain data for any trading date. You can replay OI, volume, and premium snapshots as they appeared on a specific date and expiry. This is useful for back-testing strategies and studying how OI build-up evolved before key RELIANCE moves.
What does IV mean in the RELIANCE option chain?
IV (implied volatility) in the RELIANCE option chain is the market's expected volatility priced into each strike's premium. Higher IV means costlier options and a wider expected move. Compare call and put IV across strikes to spot skew — richer OTM put IV signals downside-hedging demand. IV typically spikes before RELIANCE events and cools off afterwards.