Expiration, exercise, and assignment | Robinhood

Expiration, exercise, and assignment

Unlike stocks, options have set expiration, exercise, and assignment dates.

Expiration

Each option contract has a set expiration date. This date significantly impacts the value of the option contract because it limits the time you can buy, sell, or exercise the option contract. Once an option contract expires, it will stop trading and either be exercised or expire worthless.

The following are a few important things to keep in mind as the expiration date of an option contract approaches:

  • We’ll attempt to exercise an option you own that’s $0.01 or more in-the-money, as long as your investment account has the required buying power, such as for a call option, or the necessary underlying shares to sell, such as for a put option. Keep in mind that managing your options positions, including taking proactive steps to mitigate risk, is ultimately your responsibility.
  • If you don’t have enough buying power or underlying shares to exercise your option, we may attempt to sell the contract in the market for you within the last 30 to 45 minutes before the market closes on the option’s expiration date. However, we may take action on a position outside of that 45-minute window based on market conditions.
  • Robinhood’s risk checks are designed to close positions based on the position’s value, the implied risk, and your current account portfolio and value, among other things.
  • If an index option is in-the-money at expiration, it’ll be exercised or assigned automatically. The resulting cash credit or debit will be determined by the strike price when compared to the settlement value of the index in the morning for AM options, or the evening for PM options.

Moneyness of an option

In-the-money, at-the-money, and out-of-the-money refer to the position of the underlying security’s price relative to the strike price of the option. They’re also sometimes referred to as the moneyness of an option.

If your option is in-the-money at the market’s close, Robinhood will attempt to exercise it for you at expiration unless:

  • You don’t have sufficient buying power.
  • The exercise would result in a short stock position.
  • You’ve asked Robinhood to submit a Do Not Exercise (DNE) request on your behalf. Keep in mind, the cut-off time for submitting a DNE request is 5 PM ET.

Once your contract expires, it’ll move to your expired contracts in your account History.

Note

After-hours price movements can change the moneyness, being the relative position of the current or future price of an underlying stock with respect to the strike price of an options contract.

If for any reason we can't sell your contract, and you don’t have the necessary buying power or shares to exercise it, we may attempt to submit a DNE request to the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC), and your contract should expire worthless.

To determine if an option position is “at risk of being in-the-money,” Robinhood will calculate an estimated upper and lower bound for the underlying security’s close price on the expiration date. If the strike price falls within these parameters, we may place an order to close your position.

Exercise

If your stock option is in-the-money, Robinhood will typically exercise it for you at expiration automatically. However, you can also exercise your stock options contract early. Keep in mind, you cannot exercise index options early. Index options are automatically exercised if they are in-the-money based on the settlement value at expiration.

In the app:

  1. Navigate to the options position detail screen
  2. Select Exercise
  3. Follow the prompts to exercise your contract

On web classic:

  1. Navigate to the options position detail screen
  2. Select Exercise this option

You’ll then be guided through steps to exercise your contract.

Timing

Before expiration day for stock options, an early exercise request will be submitted immediately if it’s placed during regular market hours (9 AM-4 PM ET), Monday-Friday (except during market closures). Contact us before 5 PM ET if you’d like to cancel an exercise request.

Early exercise requests submitted after 4 PM ET will be queued for the next trading day. You can cancel a pending exercise request until 11:59 PM ET for stock options.

On expiration day, you won’t be able to submit an early exercise request after 4 PM ET. Contact us to request an exercise request after 4 PM ET. We’ll try to accommodate exercise requests until 5 PM ET on a best-effort basis.

Note

Index options cannot be exercised early.

Keep in mind

Generally the UK time is 5 hours ahead of Eastern Time (ET). However, it is 4 hours ahead between the 2nd Sunday in March and the last Sunday in March, and again between the last Sunday of October and the first Sunday in November.

How to confirm

You’ll get an in-app confirmation that your option was exercised and that the associated shares are pending. You’ll also get an email and an in-app notification before the next trading day confirming that your option was exercised or assigned (after we receive confirmation from the OCC).

How to submit a DNE

If your option is out-of-the-money at the close, Robinhood will take no action and the contract will typically expire. If you’d like to submit a DNE request, you must contact us before 5 PM ET on the expiration date.

Assignment

When you’re assigned, you have the obligation to fulfil the terms of the contract. When you sell-to-open a stock options contract, you can be assigned at any point prior to expiration (regardless of the underlying share price). You cannot be assigned early on an index options contract.

Depending on the collateral held for a short contract, a few different things can occur. Check out Basic options strategies (Level 2) and Advanced options strategies (Level 3) to learn more about calls, puts, and multi-leg options strategies.

Unassigned anticipated assignment

On rare occasions, the in-the-money short stock option of a spread won’t get assigned. This happens when the counterparty files a DNE request for their in-the-money option, or a post-market movement shifts the option from in-the-money to out-of-the-money (and the contract holder decides not to exercise). In this scenario, you’ll likely be long or short the stock the following trading day, potentially resulting in an account deficit or margin call.

All resulting short stock positions must be covered the following trading day.

The scenario listed above could result in a gain or loss that’s greater than theoretical max gain or loss on the position.

Early assignment

If you’re trading a multi-leg stock options strategy and are assigned a short position before expiration, keep the following in mind, such as any account deficits or margin calls.

Decreased buying power

Early assignment may result in decreased buying power. This is because the positions you hold are used to calculate your buying power, and at the time you’re assigned, you may not have the shares (for call spreads) or the buying power (for put spreads) needed to cover the deficit in your account. If you have an account deficit, you can’t open new positions until the deficit is resolved.

Account deficits

Early assignment may also result in an account deficit if it causes you to use more buying power than you have available. When you have an account deficit, there are a few potential actions that you can take, including exercising your long contract or buying/selling shares. If you have an account deficit and choose to exercise your long contract to increase your buying power, you will not be able to open new positions while your exercise is pending. But you should be able to open new positions once your exercise has been processed if exercising your long contract is sufficient to cover your account deficit.

Margin calls

Early assignment may also result in margin call if it causes your account value to fall below your margin maintenance requirement. When you have a margin call, you can:

  • Exercise a long contract
  • Place an order to buy or sell shares and potentially sell the remaining leg of an assigned spread, or
  • Deposit enough money to cover the margin call

If you have a margin call and choose to exercise your long contract to decrease your margin deficiency, the margin call may persist while the exercise is pending, or if the exercise was not sufficient enough to cover your margin deficit. If exercising your long contract is sufficient to cover your margin deficit, any margin calls should be satisfied once your exercise is processed.

Early assignment and exercise

Keep in mind that we can’t process an early assignment before the end of the trading day, which means we can’t exercise the long leg until the next trading day (at the earliest). That’s because the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) doesn’t notify us of your assignment until after the market closes (when they process assignments). While funds and shares that result from exercises are made available immediately during market hours, positions exercised after market hours are queued and credited to your account the next trading day.

Finding your trade details

In the app or web classic:

  1. Select Account (person icon) → in the app, Menu (3 bars)
  2. Select History
  3. Select the option you’re looking for (e.g. ABC $1,200 Call Oct. 21 Exercise)

Dividend risk for stock options

Dividend risk is the risk that you’ll get assigned on a short call position (either as part of a covered call or spread) the trading day before the underlying security’s ex-dividend date. If this happens and you don’t own 100 shares of the stock, you’ll open the ex-date with a short stock position and actually be responsible for paying that dividend yourself. You can potentially avoid this by closing any position that includes a short call option at any time before the end of regular market hours on the trading day before the ex-date.

Robinhood may take action in your brokerage account to close any positions that have dividend risk the trading day before an ex-dividend date. Generally, we’ll only take action if the dividend that would be owed upon assignment represents a large portion of your total account value, which we’ll try to do on a best-effort basis.

Stock options dividend example

Let’s say, ABC is going to pay a dividend as follows:

  • Ex-date: October 1
  • Record date: October 2
  • Pay date: October 31
  • Amount: $1

If you’re short, or you’ve sold an option call contract for ABC that’s expiring on or after October 1, you’re at risk of an assignment.

For example, if you get assigned on September 30, you’d have a short position of 100 shares that were exercised by the counterparty (a person who bought and exercised the call option) when the market opens on October 1. If this occurs, you’ll have to deliver the underlying shares and pay the counterparty the dividend that is associated with these shares.

In this example, you’d owe a dividend of $100, which is $1 x 100 shares. We’d automatically deduct the dividend amount from your account, even if it causes you to have a negative balance.

You can avoid this dividend risk by closing your option before the market closes on any trading day before the ex-dividend date.

Note

The day before the ex-dividend, we’ll try to prevent you from selling to open new short call stock options that are likely to be assigned that same night if the underlying symbol ex-dividend date occurs on the next trading day. This is only temporary, and you can open new short call positions on or after the ex-dividend date.

Disclosures

Any hypothetical examples are provided for illustrative purposes only. Actual results will vary.

Content is provided for educational purposes only, doesn't constitute tax or investment advice, and isn't a recommendation for any security or trading strategy. All investments involve risk, including the possible loss of capital. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results.

If multiple option positions or strategies are established in the same underlying symbol, Robinhood may deem it necessary to pair or re-pair the separately established options positions or strategies together as part of its risk management process.

Robinhood doesn't guarantee favourable investment outcomes. The past performance of a security or financial product doesn't guarantee future results or returns.

Customers should consider their investment objectives and risks carefully before investing in options.

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All investing involves risk and a loss of principal is possible.

Robinhood U.K. Ltd (Robinhood UK) is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN: 823590). Robinhood UK onboards UK customers and has the lead customer relationship with UK customers in relation to their use of the Robinhood UK app and website. Robinhood UK introduces UK customers to Robinhood Securities, LLC for order routing, execution, clearing, settlement, arranging custody services and margin lending to eligible UK customers with margin accounts. Robinhood Securities, LLC is regulated in the U.S. by the SEC and FINRA. Robinhood UK and Robinhood Securities, LLC are subsidiaries of Robinhood Markets, Inc.

Robinhood U.K. Ltd is a private limited company registered in England and Wales (09908051).

Robinhood does not provide investment advice. Individual investors should make their own decisions.

Commission-free trading of stocks refers to $0 commissions for Robinhood self-directed individual brokerage accounts that trade U.S. listed securities and ADRs. Keep in mind, other costs such as regulatory fees may apply to your brokerage account. Please see Robinhood UK’s Fee Schedule to learn more.

UK Privacy policy

Robinhood, 70 Saint Mary Axe (Suite 307), London, England, EC3A 8BE. © 2025 Robinhood. All rights reserved.