Does Theta Decay Over the Weekend? What Nifty Option Sellers Should Know
Time decay does not pause when the market closes — here is how weekends and NSE holidays are actually priced, and what it means for buyers and sellers.
By Bulan Sarkar ·
In short: Yes — Theta is decay of time value with respect to calendar time, and calendar time keeps passing over weekends and NSE holidays, so options do lose value across them. But the market largely anticipates this: pricing models count the closed days, so much of the weekend decay is already discounted into Friday's premium rather than appearing as a sudden Monday-morning drop. For sellers this still favours holding premium over a long weekend to collect two or three days of decay against a closed market; for buyers it is a warning against holding low-Delta longs through non-trading days.
Theta runs on calendar time, not trading time
An option's time value exists because the underlying still might move favourably before expiry; as the calendar advances toward expiry, that window shrinks and time value melts. The decay is a function of days remaining, and Friday-to-Monday is three calendar days regardless of whether the exchange is open. So in the pure Black-Scholes sense, an option unambiguously loses time value over a weekend — the clock does not stop just because NSE is shut. This is why the honest short answer to "does Theta decay over the weekend?" is simply yes.
But the market front-runs the weekend
Here is the nuance that trips up beginners: the market knows the weekend is coming. If everyone could see three days of guaranteed decay arriving after Friday's close, buyers would sell and sellers would pile in on Friday, and the premium adjusts in advance. In practice much of the weekend's decay is bled out during Friday's session rather than gapping down on Monday morning. So a buyer hoping to "beat" the weekend by holding through it, and a seller expecting a free Monday gift, are both partly disappointed — the anticipated portion is already in the price.
Model versus reality
Textbook models assume decay is spread smoothly across calendar days, so a naive Theta figure divides the year by 365 and hands you an equal daily bleed including weekends. Reality is messier. Because volatility is only realised while the market is open, some pricing conventions weight trading days more heavily than closed days, and market makers adjust premiums around known closures. The result is that observed decay is neither purely per-calendar-day nor purely per-trading-day — it is a blend, front-loaded around Fridays and long weekends because participants price the closure ahead of time.
A concrete Nifty weekend example
Say it is Friday and Nifty is at 24,500 with a weekly 24,500 CE priced at ₹110 and a quoted daily Theta of −15. A naive reading says you lose 3 × 15 = ₹45 of time value from Friday to Monday, i.e. ₹45 × 75 = ₹3,375 per lot. In reality, by Friday's close a good part of that decay has already been shaved off the premium, so the Monday open (if Nifty is unchanged) might show only a partial further drop rather than the full ₹45. The total three-day decay still lands — the market just distributes it around the close rather than dumping it all on Monday morning.
What it means for sellers
For premium sellers the weekend is still a friend, with eyes open. Holding a short strangle or short straddle over a Friday-to-Monday span means collecting two to three calendar days of time value while spot cannot move against you for two of them — no trading, so no adverse Gamma moves over Saturday and Sunday. A long NSE holiday weekend stretches this further. The catch is gap risk: the market is closed but the world is not, and a weekend headline can gap Nifty on Monday, so the collected Theta must be weighed against the Gamma exposure of an overnight/weekend gap.
What it means for buyers
For buyers the lesson is defensive: avoid holding low-Delta weekly longs across a weekend or long holiday unless you specifically expect a move. Those are the options with almost pure time value and little directional participation, so a closed stretch bleeds them with no chance of a rescue move. If you must carry a long view over closed days, prefer slightly in-the-money strikes (more intrinsic value, less time value to lose) or longer expiries where the daily decay is a smaller fraction of the premium. The worst holding over a long weekend is a cheap far-OTM weekly.
The practical takeaway
Do not overthink the weekend as a magic profit or a hidden trap — treat it as what it is: two or three days of Theta that the market has largely, but not perfectly, already priced. Sellers can lean into it while sizing for weekend gap risk; buyers should avoid parking pure-time-value options through closed days. And always account for NSE holidays explicitly when they extend a weekend, because a three- or four-day closure compounds the same effect. The decay is real, it is continuous on the calendar, and being deliberate about which side of it you are on is the whole game.
Key takeaways
- Theta is calendar-time decay, so options do lose time value over weekends and holidays.
- The market anticipates the closure, so much of the weekend decay is priced into Friday, not gapped on Monday.
- Observed decay is a blend of per-calendar-day and per-trading-day, front-loaded around closures.
- Sellers can collect two to three days of Theta over a weekend, but must respect gap risk on Monday.
- Buyers should avoid holding low-Delta pure-time-value weeklies through closed days.
- Account for NSE holidays explicitly — a long weekend compounds the effect.
Frequently asked questions
Does Theta decay over the weekend?
Do I get a big premium drop on Monday morning?
Should option sellers hold positions over the weekend?
Why do buyers get hurt over long weekends?
Is decay per calendar day or per trading day?
Sources & references
Published 3 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.