PassSeries7

Options

Series 7 Options Formulas | Max Gain, Loss, Breakeven

Review Series 7 options formulas for calls, puts, covered calls, protective puts, spreads, and straddles, then drill payoff math with mapped questions.

Why options math decides Series 7 scores

Options is the highest-friction, highest-yield block on the 2026 FINRA Series 7. Questions ask for exact dollar figures — maximum gain, maximum loss, breakeven — inside short customer scenarios, and the math has to be automatic by exam day. The 2026 FINRA Series 7 exam delivers 125 scored multiple-choice items plus 5 unscored pretest items — 130 items total — in 3 hours and 45 minutes. The passing score is 72. The SIE is a corequisite, so most candidates take SIE first or alongside. PassSeries7 is an independent study product and is not affiliated with FINRA. FINRA does not publish a topic-level question count for options, and no study product should claim one. The pattern is simpler: candidates who own the formulas below clear the chapter, and candidates who don't burn time they can't spare in the last hour.

Single-option positions

Start here. Every strategy later is a combination of these four, and getting them wrong rules out every spread and hedge built on top.

Stock + option hedges

The two stock/option combinations the exam tests most.

Vertical spreads

Two options of the same class on the same underlying, different strikes, same expiration. Whether the position is a net debit or a net credit determines the formulas.

Straddles and combinations

Long volatility or short volatility trades. Same underlying, same expiration, one call and one put.

How to work an options question under exam time

The fastest candidates don't solve options questions — they apply a four-step template to every prompt.

  1. Name the position. Single call? Single put? Spread? Straddle? Hedge? Name it before you touch a number. Misnaming the position is the single most common options mistake.
  2. Set net debit or net credit. For any multi-leg position, sum the premiums with signs. This number is the max gain (for credit spreads and short volatility) or the max loss (for debit spreads and long volatility).
  3. Apply the formula. Max gain, max loss, and breakeven fall out of the template once the position is named and the net debit/credit is set. No need to redraw the payoff diagram for every question.
  4. Sanity-check against the payoff. Does a long call really have unlimited upside? Does a short put really lose down to zero? A ten-second check catches nearly every calculation error.

The traps the exam loves

Options distractors cluster around a small number of predictable mistakes. Name them so they don't cost you points.

How PassSeries7 drills options math

PassSeries7 ships the options chapter inside the 436-page handbook across 20 chapters, with worked formulas and payoff diagrams for every strategy above. Section-tagged flashcards from the 385-card deck push max gain, max loss, and breakeven into spaced-recall rotation so the templates stay automatic. The 1,000-question mapped practice bank includes options-only sets with worked explanations for every distractor — so you learn which trap each wrong answer is testing, not just which letter was right. The 125-question full-length exam simulation threads options throughout a 3h45m block, exactly as FINRA does, so fatigue on options math surfaces before exam day.

Frequently asked

Do I need to memorize every Series 7 options formula?

Yes — and no. You have to memorize the single-option formulas (calls and puts, long and short), because every spread and hedge is a combination of those four. Once the single-option formulas are automatic, spreads and straddles fall out of the net debit / net credit templates without raw memorization.

How heavy is options on the Series 7?

Options is widely treated as the highest-friction, highest-yield block on the Series 7 — a chapter that punishes rushed study and rewards candidates who drill the math daily. FINRA does not publish a topic-level question count for options, and no study product should claim one. Plan to spend meaningful time there regardless.

What's the fastest way to set up max gain, max loss, and breakeven?

Name the position, sum the premiums with signs to get the net debit or net credit, then apply the formula for that position type. A payoff diagram is a sanity check, not the solution — the formula table is faster and less error-prone under exam time.

Are options formulas the same for index options?

The max gain, max loss, and breakeven formulas are structurally the same. The differences the exam tests are settlement (cash-settled vs. physical delivery), contract multipliers, and which products are American versus European exercise style. Those belong to the chapter content, not to the formulas themselves.

Do I need to draw a payoff diagram on every question?

No. Diagrams are useful when you're learning a new strategy, but under exam time the four-step template — name, net debit/credit, formula, sanity check — is faster. Save the diagram for positions you haven't fully internalized yet.