Bull Call Spread

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Bull Call Spread

A bull call spread is a defined-risk bullish options strategy built by buying a call at a lower strike and selling another call at a higher strike with the same expiration. It is usually entered for a net debit and is designed for traders who expect a moderate rise in the underlying rather than an explosive upside move.

Structure
Long lower-strike call + short higher-strike call
Bias
Moderately bullish
Entry Type
Net debit
Risk Profile
Defined risk / defined reward
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What A Bull Call Spread Is
Foundations
Core Definition

A bull call spread is constructed by purchasing a call option at one strike and simultaneously selling another call option at a higher strike, both on the same underlying and with the same expiration date.

Because the premium paid for the long call is larger than the premium received from the short call, the position is generally established for a net debit. The trade is bullish, but unlike a naked long call, its profit potential is capped once the underlying rises above the short strike.

Two-Leg Construction
Long Leg
Buy lower-strike call
Short Leg
Sell higher-strike call
Expiration
Same expiry
Capital Outlay
Net debit paid

The short call helps reduce the cost of the long call, which makes the position cheaper than buying a standalone call. The trade-off is that upside is limited once price reaches the short strike.

Why Traders Use It

Traders often choose a bull call spread when they want bullish exposure with lower upfront cost and clearly defined risk. It is especially useful when the view is for a measured rise rather than an outsized breakout.

How A Bull Call Spread Makes Or Loses Money
Mechanics
Economic Structure
Entry
Net debit
Max Loss
Debit paid
Breakeven
Long strike + debit
Max Profit
Spread width – debit

Maximum loss is limited to the amount paid to enter the spread, and that occurs if the underlying is at or below the long call strike at expiration. Maximum profit is limited to the difference between the strikes minus the initial debit, and that occurs if the underlying is at or above the short call strike at expiration.

The breakeven point is the long strike plus the net debit paid. Below that level the spread loses money at expiration, while above it the spread becomes profitable until it reaches its capped maximum gain.

Worked Example

Example: Stock at 100

Suppose you buy the 100 call for 6.00 and sell the 105 call for 2.00. Your total net debit is 4.00.

Maximum loss: 4.00, or $400 per 1-lot before fees.

Breakeven: 100.00 + 4.00 = 104.00

Maximum profit: (105.00 – 100.00) – 4.00 = 1.00, or $100 per 1-lot before fees.

If the stock expires below 100, both calls expire worthless and the full debit is lost. Between 100 and 105, the spread gains value as the long call becomes more in the money. Above 105, gains are capped because the short call offsets additional upside beyond the spread width.

What You Are Really Buying

The bull call spread buys upside exposure, but only within a defined range. It is best thought of as paying a controlled amount to participate in a moderate rally while sacrificing unlimited upside in exchange for lower cost and defined risk.

Greeks And Trade Behavior
Why It Moves
Greek Profile
Delta
Positive
Gamma
Positive, but reduced
Theta
Often negative, but muted
Vega
Usually positive, but reduced

Delta: The spread is directionally bullish, so rising stock prices generally help.

Gamma: The position can gain delta as price rises, but the short call tempers the convexity relative to a standalone long call.

Theta: Time decay often works against the spread because it is entered for a debit, though the short call offsets some decay.

Vega: The spread can benefit from higher implied volatility, but less than a naked long call because the short call partially offsets vega exposure.

Before Expiration

Before expiration, a bull call spread’s value depends on the underlying price, time left, and implied volatility. It does not need to be fully in the money to show a profit before expiration because option premiums still contain time value.

In practice, the spread often performs best when the underlying rises toward the short strike in an orderly way rather than in a late, highly volatile spike.

01 / Best Setup

When it fits

  • You are bullish, but not expecting an unlimited rally.
  • You want defined risk and lower capital outlay than a naked long call.
  • You have a target area where you think the stock can rise by expiration.
02 / What helps

How the trade wins

  • The stock rises toward or through the short strike.
  • The move happens with enough time left to preserve option value.
  • Implied volatility is supportive or at least does not collapse sharply after entry.
03 / What hurts

How the trade loses

  • The stock stalls or falls below the long strike.
  • Too much time passes without the expected bullish move.
  • The spread is entered at an unfavorable debit relative to the distance between strikes.