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Another name for extrinsic value — the portion of an option premium above intrinsic value. See Extrinsic Value for the full definition. Reflects the probability the option could gain more intrinsic value before expiration.
⚡ KEY TAKEAWAY: Time value and extrinsic value are interchangeable terms. Premium sellers harvest this component through theta decay — it erodes daily and reaches zero at expiration.

Time value is synonymous with extrinsic value — the portion of premium that evaporates by expiration. For premium sellers, time value is the entire profit source. Every day that passes without a large move converts a slice of time value into your realized profit.
Time value = Premium − Intrinsic value. It reflects the market's assessment of the probability that the option could gain additional intrinsic value before expiration. More time = more probability = more time value. Higher IV = wider expected distribution = more time value.
Two AAPL $200 calls: one with 45 DTE priced at $8.50, another with 7 DTE priced at $2.20 (AAPL at $200, both ATM). The 45 DTE has $6.30 more time value — that's 6.3x the theta income opportunity, but also 6.3x longer to hold and manage.
Confusing time value with total premium. A $12 ITM option with $2 of time value decays at the same rate as a $2 OTM option with $2 of time value — theta works on the time value portion, not the total. Also: 'time value' and 'extrinsic value' are interchangeable terms.
Another name for extrinsic value — the portion of an option premium above intrinsic value. See Extrinsic Value for the full definition. Reflects the probability the option could gain more intrinsic value before expiration.
Time value and extrinsic value are interchangeable terms. Premium sellers harvest this component through theta decay — it erodes daily and reaches zero at expiration.
Time value = Premium − Intrinsic value. It reflects the market's assessment of the probability that the option could gain additional intrinsic value before expiration. More time = more probability = more time value. Higher IV = wider expected distribution = more time value.
Confusing time value with total premium. A $12 ITM option with $2 of time value decays at the same rate as a $2 OTM option with $2 of time value — theta works on the time value portion, not the total. Also: 'time value' and 'extrinsic value' are interchangeable terms.