10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) (ZNU6) Options Chain
The options chain displays all available contracts with real-time quotes, Greeks, volume, and open interest for each strike and expiration. It is the primary tool for options trade selection.
10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) (ZNU6) operates in the Interest-Rate Futures sector, specifically the Interest-Rate Futures industry, listed on CBOT. 10-Year Treasury Note Futures September 2026 contract: CBOT 10-Year Treasury Note futures (ZN): the most liquid US Treasury futures contract, used for duration hedging and curve trading.
Snapshot as of Jul 16, 2026.
- Spot Price
- $109.17
- Total OI
- 4.4M
- Total Volume
- 580.3K
- Front Expiration
- 36 days
- ATM IV
- 4.4%
- Avg Bid/Ask Spread
- 1.16%
As of Jul 16, 2026, 10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) (ZNU6) has 4.4M open contracts and 580.3K contracts traded. The nearest expiration is 36 days out. ATM implied volatility is 4.4%. Average bid/ask spread across the chain is 1.16%: tight liquidity, suitable for active strategies. The options chain aggregates every listed strike and expiration, letting traders evaluate skew, term structure, and liquidity in a single view.
How ZNU6 options chain Data Feeds Strategy Selection
Strategy selection on 10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) options does not derive from any single metric in isolation. The options chain view above sits inside a broader read: ATM IV currently sits at 4.4% and dealer gamma exposure is positive, so dealer hedging is mechanically mean-reverting. Combine the options chain data here with the volatility-skew surface, dealer-gamma exposure, max-pain level, and upcoming-events calendar to build a positioning thesis. Risk-defined structures (credit spreads, debit spreads, iron condors) are usually safer than naked positions while the regime is uncertain; the data on this page anchors the inputs but does not by itself constitute a trade thesis.
How to read the ZNU6 chain depth
The listed-expirations table above shows every expiration available for 10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) options with its days-to-expiration count and ATM implied volatility. Front-month expirations carry the most volume, the highest gamma, and the tightest bid-ask spreads; longer-dated tenors carry less liquidity but more vega exposure. ZNU6 front expiration sits at 36 days - the typical hedging horizon for monthly options.
ZNU6 chain mechanics and execution
Options are listed at standardized strike intervals (typically $1 for sub-$25 underlyings, $2.50-$5 for mid-cap, $10-$50 for large-cap), and the deltas of each listed strike are determined by where IV lies relative to the strike's moneyness. Average bid/ask spread on the ZNU6 chain is 1.16% - a measure of liquidity. Tighter spreads on liquid strikes mean lower transaction costs; wider spreads on long-dated or far-OTM strikes mean execution drag can dominate the math. The chain table on the SPA side shows the full per-strike, per-expiration grid; this SSR page summarizes the listed expirations and the front-month context to anchor the structural read.
Using the ZNU6 chain to build structures
Strategy selection starts with the chain: directional theses use single-leg calls or puts, range-bound theses use credit spreads or iron condors, vol theses use straddles or strangles, calendar theses use diagonal spreads. ZNU6's current 1.25% expected move anchors wing placement - structures with wings at the implied band collect the modal-outcome premium under lognormal assumptions. Cross-reference with the gamma-exposure profile to understand where dealer hedging will reinforce or fight your position, and with the volatility-skew chart to confirm the strikes you're trading sit at the IV levels your strategy assumes.
Learn how the options chain is reported and how to read the data →
ZNU6 listed expirations
Per-expiration ATM implied volatility for ZNU6 options. Each row is one listed expiration with its days-to-expiration count and ATM IV pulled from the same term-structure feed that powers the SPA's expiration filter. Front-month expirations carry the highest gamma, the tightest bid-ask spreads, and the most volume; longer-dated tenors carry less liquidity but more vega.
| Expiration | DTE | ATM IV |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 17, 2026 | 1 | 4.0% |
| Jul 24, 2026 | 8 | 3.7% |
| Jul 31, 2026 | 15 | 4.1% |
| Aug 7, 2026 | 22 | 4.4% |
| Aug 21, 2026 | 36 | 4.4% |
Frequently asked ZNU6 options chain questions
- What does the ZNU6 options chain show right now?
- As of Jul 16, 2026, 10-Year Treasury Note Futures (September 2026) (ZNU6) has 4.4M contracts outstanding and 580.3K traded today, with ATM IV of 4.4%. The full chain spans every listed strike and expiration with bid/ask, Greeks, volume, and open interest per contract.
- What expirations are available for ZNU6 options?
- The nearest expiration is 36 days out. Listed expirations typically extend monthly with weeklies between, plus LEAPS one to two years out for liquid names.
- How tight are ZNU6 options bid/ask spreads?
- Average bid/ask spread across the chain is 1.16%. Tight liquidity supports active strategies including ratio spreads and fly structures.