NVDA Expected Move Calculator

Calculate the expected price range for NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA) based on implied volatility and time to expiration.

NVDATechnologyVery High IV (typically >70%)

NVIDIA is one of the highest-IV mega-cap names, driven by AI demand cycles and large post-earnings moves that routinely exceed expected ranges.

Options premiums are very expensive. The market is pricing in a major move. Buying options is costly, but selling carries significant risk if the move exceeds expectations.

NVDA$224.88+1.94%52-week: $129.16 – $236.54

Quote refreshes every 6h. Use as context — not a real-time price.

Upcoming EarningsMay 20, 2026 (today) · After market close

IV typically expands into earnings and crushes on the report. Plan your position size and expiration accordingly.

Enter stock price, implied volatility, and days to expiration, then click Calculate expected move to see the expected price range.

For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Read full disclaimer

Trading NVDA Options & Expected Move

NVIDIA earnings have produced some of the largest dollar moves in market history, and the expected move on this name should be treated as a floor rather than a ceiling. Hyperscaler capex commentary, data center segment growth, and supply commentary on next-generation chips drive the tape for weeks after each print. Options volume is extreme, with zero-DTE and weekly contracts seeing retail and institutional participation alike. Traders use everything from short-dated lottery calls to defined-risk butterflies to express views. GTC announcements and major hyperscaler earnings are secondary IV events. Be aware that NVDA's realized volatility has frequently outpaced implied, making short-premium strategies higher-risk than the expected move alone might suggest.

Recent NVDA Earnings History

Last 4 quarters of EPS estimate vs actual.

Recent NVDA quarterly EPS estimate versus actual, with surprise percent.
QuarterEstimateActualSurprise
Q4 2026$1.56$1.62Beat +3.62%
Q3 2026$1.27$1.30Beat +1.99%
Q2 2026$1.03$1.05Beat +2.13%
Q1 2026$0.95$0.96Beat +0.83%

EPS values from Finnhub. Refreshes daily.

Expected Move Formula

Expected Move = Price × IV × √(DTE / 365)

1σ Range: Price ± Expected Move (≈68% probability)

2σ Range: Price ± 2 × Expected Move (≈95% probability)

How to Use This Calculator for NVDA

  1. Enter NVDA's current stock price — check your broker or a financial data site for the latest quote.
  2. Enter the implied volatility — use the at-the-money IV for the expiration you're targeting. Your broker's option chain will show this.
  3. Enter days to expiration — the number of calendar days until the options expire.
  4. Click Calculate — see the 1σ and 2σ expected ranges for NVDA.
  5. Apply to your trade — use the ranges to select strikes, evaluate iron condors, or decide if options premiums are fairly priced.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the expected move for NVDA?
The expected move for NVDA (NVIDIA Corp.) is the price range the market expects the stock to stay within over a given period, based on its current implied volatility. Enter the stock price, IV, and days to expiration above to calculate it.
How is NVDA's expected move calculated?
Expected Move = Stock Price × IV × √(DTE / 365). The 1 standard deviation range covers approximately 68% probability, and the 2 standard deviation range covers approximately 95%.
What does NVDA's implied volatility tell me?
NVDA's IV reflects the market's consensus on how much the stock will move. Higher IV means options are more expensive and the expected range is wider. IV often rises before earnings and falls after (vol crush).
Should I buy or sell options on NVDA?
That depends on whether IV is elevated or depressed relative to historical levels. When IV is high, selling strategies (covered calls, iron condors) can be more profitable. When IV is low, buying options is cheaper. This calculator helps you understand the expected range before deciding.
How accurate is the expected move?
The expected move is a statistical estimate, not a guarantee. Historically, stocks stay within the 1σ expected range about 68% of the time and within the 2σ range about 95% of the time. Earnings announcements, news events, and market crashes can cause moves well beyond the expected range.