BARK

BARK, Inc. Options

Search BARK call options and put options with real-time pricing, Greeks, and implied volatility data.

Search BARK Options Now
$0.89 Market Closed
$-0.02 (-2.2%)
Prev Close
$0.91
Open
$0.9
Day Range
$0.87 - $0.93
Volume
1,056,201
Last updated: Jan 27, 2026 07:54 PM EST

About BARK Options

BARK, Inc. (BARK) options give traders the right to buy or sell BARK stock at a predetermined price before a specific expiration date. Options are powerful financial instruments used for speculation, hedging, and income generation.

Call Options

BARK call options give you the right to buy shares at the strike price. Profit when BARK, Inc. stock rises.

Put Options

BARK put options give you the right to sell shares at the strike price. Profit when BARK, Inc. stock falls.

What Data You'll Find

Our free BARK options search tool provides:

  • Strike Prices — Various price levels for calls and puts
  • Expiration Dates — Filter by 7, 30, 60, or 90 days out
  • Premium (Price) — Current option contract prices
  • Volume & Open Interest — Liquidity and market activity
  • Implied Volatility (IV) — Market's expected price movement
  • Greeks — Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega sensitivity measures
  • Intrinsic & Extrinsic Value — Value breakdown
Pro Tip: Look for BARK options with high volume and open interest for better liquidity and tighter bid-ask spreads.

Understanding BARK Options Greeks

When trading BARK, Inc. options, the Greeks help you understand how the option price will change:

Delta (Δ)

How much the BARK option price moves when the stock moves $1. A delta of 0.50 means the option gains $0.50 for every $1 stock increase.

Theta (Θ)

Daily time decay of the option. BARK options lose value each day as expiration approaches, even if the stock price stays flat.

Gamma (Γ)

Rate of Delta change. Higher gamma means Delta moves faster, making near-ATM BARK options more responsive to price changes.

Vega (ν)

Volatility sensitivity. When BARK, Inc.'s implied volatility rises, high-vega options become more valuable.

Learn more:

BARK Options FAQ

To buy BARK (BARK, Inc.) options, you need a brokerage account with options trading enabled (like TD Ameritrade, E*TRADE, or Robinhood). Search for BARK options, select your desired strike price and expiration, choose call or put, and place your order. Always understand the risks and consider starting with paper trading.

The optimal expiration depends on your strategy. 30-45 day expirations offer a good balance of time value and theta decay for most traders. Shorter expirations (7-14 days) have higher gamma but faster time decay. Longer expirations (60-90+ days) cost more but give the trade more time to work.

Use our options search tool to see current BARK implied volatility levels. Compare the IV to historical averages to determine if options are relatively expensive (high IV) or cheap (low IV). High IV often occurs before earnings or major events.

ITM (In The Money) BARK options have intrinsic value — calls where strike < stock price, puts where strike > stock price. They're more expensive but have higher delta. OTM (Out of The Money) options are cheaper but have lower probability of profit. ATM (At The Money) options have strike ≈ stock price and highest gamma.