Long Call Butterfly vs Long Put Butterfly
Two related strategies — key differences explained
When to Choose Each
- ✓Direction is neutral — no strong directional bias
- ✓Prefer paying defined cost for leverage
- ✓Prefer Low IV environment — IV is cheap and you want to own options
- ✓Regime: 🟡 Chop
- ✓Direction is neutral — no strong directional bias
- ✓Prefer paying defined cost for leverage
- ✓Prefer Low IV environment — IV is cheap and you want to own options
- ✓Regime: 🟡 Chop
Risk / Reward Summary
Both strategies share the same max risk profile (limited). Max reward is also identical (limited) for both. Both are debit strategies — you pay or collect the same type of cash flow at entry.
EdgeOS Signal Relevance
Both the Long Call Butterfly and Long Put Butterfly are neutral strategies. The primary difference when integrating EdgeOS signals is the structure: the Long Call Butterfly (debit) is better suited when IV is low and you want to buy cheap options. The Long Put Butterfly (debit) favors a low IV, premium-buying environment. Use the EdgeOS extension score as a tiebreaker — tight extension (below 0.4) favors debit strategies with room to run; stretched extension (above 1.0) favors credit strategies or defined-risk spreads.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Long Call Butterfly and Long Put Butterfly?
The Long Call Butterfly is a neutral debit strategy with limited max risk and limited max reward. The Long Put Butterfly is a neutral debit strategy with limited max risk and limited max reward. Both strategies share the same max risk profile (limited). Max reward is also identical (limited) for both. Both are debit strategies — you pay or collect the same type of cash flow at entry.
Which is better, Long Call Butterfly or Long Put Butterfly?
Neither is universally better. Use the Long Call Butterfly when: Neutral — expecting the stock to pin near the middle strike at expiration; want a low-cost, high-reward-to-risk structure targeting a specific price level. Use the Long Put Butterfly when: Neutral — expecting the stock to pin near the middle strike, often used as a cheap directional put structure when placed OTM below the current price. The best choice depends on your directional bias, IV environment, and risk tolerance.
When should I use Long Call Butterfly vs Long Put Butterfly?
Choose Long Call Butterfly for a neutral outlook in prefer low iv conditions with chop regime. Choose Long Put Butterfly for a neutral outlook in prefer low iv conditions with chop regime.
Strategy Pages
Build and compare payoff diagrams
Visualize the exact payoff curves for the Long Call Butterfly and Long Put Butterfly side by side with live data in the strategy builder.