Roughly $2.2 billion in crypto options are set to expire, putting BTC and ETH traders on watch as max pain levels sit far from current spot prices and the broader market remains deep in fear territory.
The expiry, scheduled for 08:00 UTC on April 18, 2025, covers 23,200 BTC options contracts worth approximately $1.9 billion in notional value and 177,000 ETH options contracts worth around $271 million. Deribit pegged the combined figure at over $2.25 billion, making it one of the larger weekly expiry events in recent months.
Friday options expiries on Deribit have become a regular pulse check for crypto derivatives markets. Large notional values do not automatically translate into spot volatility, but they reveal where traders have placed their bets and where dealer hedging flows may shift once contracts settle.
Max Pain, Put-Call Ratios, and Open Interest Show Where Pressure May Build
The BTC max pain price for this expiry sits at $82,000, while ETH max pain lands at $1,600. Max pain represents the price at which the largest number of options contracts expire worthless, and it often acts as a gravitational pull in the hours leading up to settlement.
With BTC trading near $70,454 at press time, the gap between spot and max pain is substantial. That disconnect suggests most put holders are currently in profit while call holders above $82,000 face losses, a dynamic reflected in the BTC put/call ratio of 0.92.
ETH’s put/call ratio is even more skewed toward calls at 0.88, indicating slightly more bullish positioning relative to BTC. Open interest on BTC options is heavily concentrated around the $100,000 strike, where roughly $1.4 billion in contracts sit. That level remains aspirational given current prices, but it signals where longer-dated speculative interest has clustered.
The concentration of open interest well above spot price echoes a pattern seen during recent periods of macro-driven selling pressure, where derivatives positioning stayed bullish even as spot markets pulled back.
Why Spot Reaction May Stay Muted Even With Fear Still Elevated
The Fear and Greed Index reads 11, firmly in Extreme Fear. That score aligns with a market that has been under sustained pressure from macro headwinds, even as BTC managed a modest 0.67% gain over the past 24 hours.
Despite the large notional value expiring, analysis citing Greeks Live characterized the near-term derivatives setup as “predominantly bullish,” with some traders eyeing a potential BTC test of the $88,000 to $90,000 range after settlement. Consolidation remains equally plausible.
The disconnect between extreme fear in sentiment gauges and relatively bullish options positioning is worth watching. It suggests that while retail sentiment has cratered, derivatives traders have not fully capitulated on higher price targets. Institutional flows tell a similar story, as recent data shows institutions gradually rotating back into Bitcoin even while retail favors traditional safe havens.
For traders monitoring post-expiry price action, the key levels to watch are whether BTC gravitates toward the $82,000 max pain zone or remains anchored near current levels around $70,000. The evolving U.S. regulatory landscape and ongoing macro uncertainty are likely to weigh more heavily on directional moves than the expiry mechanics alone.
Options expiries set the table, but they rarely dictate the meal. Post-settlement liquidity shifts and any changes in open interest rolling into next week’s contracts will offer a clearer read on where BTC and ETH derivative markets head next.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.



