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Skip-Strike Put Butterfly vs Long Put Butterfly

Same debit structure — different directional bias

Side-by-Side Comparison

AttributeSkip-Strike Put ButterflyLong Put Butterfly
Directionmoderately bearishneutral
Structuredebitdebit
Max Risklimitedlimited
Max Rewardlimitedlimited
Legs / ConstructionBuy 1 put at strike C · Sell 2 puts at strike B · Buy 1 put at strike A (A skips one strike below B — wider lower wing) · Small debit or small creditBuy 1 put at strike C (higher) · Sell 2 puts at strike B (middle) · Buy 1 put at strike A (lower) · All same expiration, equally spaced strikes · Net debit
Ideal IVAny IVPrefer Low IV
Best Regime🔴 Bear🟡 Chop
Ideal WhenModerately bearish — want a butterfly profit zone below the current price with some forgiveness if the stock keeps falling past the short strikesNeutral — expecting the stock to pin near the middle strike, often used as a cheap directional put structure when placed OTM below the current price

When to Choose Each

Choose Skip-Strike Put Butterfly when…
  • Direction is moderately bearish — expecting downside
  • Prefer paying defined cost for leverage
  • Any IV environment — IV level is not the primary driver
  • Regime: 🔴 Bear
Choose Long Put Butterfly when…
  • 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

The Skip-Strike Put Butterfly fits an EdgeOS moderately bearish context (SCTR < 4, bear count active). The Long Put Butterfly fits an EdgeOS neutral context (SCTR 4–9, no active directional count). Switching between the two strategies depends on which EdgeOS signal is active at entry.

Tip: Open the workspace terminal to see live SCTR scores, bull/bear counts, extension scores, and Saty ATR levels — then match the signal context to the right strategy. Open Terminal →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Skip-Strike Put Butterfly and Long Put Butterfly?

The Skip-Strike Put Butterfly is a moderately bearish 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, Skip-Strike Put Butterfly or Long Put Butterfly?

Neither is universally better. Use the Skip-Strike Put Butterfly when: Moderately bearish — want a butterfly profit zone below the current price with some forgiveness if the stock keeps falling past the short strikes. 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 Skip-Strike Put Butterfly vs Long Put Butterfly?

Choose Skip-Strike Put Butterfly for a moderately bearish outlook in any iv conditions with bear regime. Choose Long Put Butterfly for a neutral outlook in prefer low iv conditions with chop regime.

Strategy Pages

Full Skip-Strike Put Butterfly GuideFull Long Put Butterfly Guide← All 55 Strategies
Related Comparisons
Long Call Butterfly vs Long Put Butterfly

Build and compare payoff diagrams

Visualize the exact payoff curves for the Skip-Strike Put Butterfly and Long Put Butterfly side by side with live data in the strategy builder.

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