How Often Do You Get Filled At Mid Price In Vertical Option Spreads?

I find myself getting filled at mid price quite frequently, especially on the indexes such as Ndx, Spx etc. This can be much more profitable than being filled at either the bid or the ask, depending of course on whether one is buying or selling.

With the spread so wide and so little liquidity, it's nearly impossible to be filled at the bid for buy and ask for sell if you want to be filled right away. Midprice is the best price one can get when using limit orders. Market orders? You are basically at the mercy of the market and it's going to depend on how desperate you need your order filled.
 
The 100ms auction when market makers submit competing offers for your order and the best offer wins:

https://www.cboe.com/us/options/trading/crossing_orders/

https://www.nasdaq.com/MRX_FIX

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That's for the MM's and the wholesalers who paid for our orders. That's not available for us retail traders. For us, it's whatever wholesalers want to fill us at. Basically they fill us at one price and then they turn around and go to the market to flip for a profit using whatever system there is in the market, auctions or whatever. That's my speculation. Since there is no transparency so I can't know for sure.
 
Midprice is the best price one can get when using limit orders.
Market orders? You are basically at the mercy of the market and it's going to depend on how desperate you need your order filled.

Market orders are an amateur joke. You are basically putting a sign on yourself that says 'rape me' if you use a market order.

I once used a market order for a single SPY option when I was new...to my shock, I got filled way out there, way overpriced.
That was the last time I ever use a market order. Limit only.
 
Market orders are an amateur joke. You are basically putting a sign on yourself that says 'rape me' if you use a market order.

I once used a market order for a single SPY option when I was new...to my shock, I got filled way out there, way overpriced.
That was the last time I ever use a market order. Limit only.

Market orders are still useful when you need to tp fast from a profitable trade when the profit is evaporating fast and the spread is wide. But for entry, yeah, one should use limit orders.
 
Market orders are still useful when you need to tp fast from a profitable trade when the profit is evaporating fast and the spread is wide. But for entry, yeah, one should use limit orders.

It seems, sometimes, it's a lose-lose proposition for you.

If you use a limit order.....your order hangs, and hangs. Doesn't get filled. And if you use a market order, you get raped on price. You can't win. The computers and market makers are screwing your order either way.
 
Market orders are an amateur joke. You are basically putting a sign on yourself that says 'rape me' if you use a market order.

I once used a market order for a single SPY option when I was new...to my shock, I got filled way out there, way overpriced.
That was the last time I ever use a market order. Limit only.

I have used mrkt orders on spy options a lot and did not had that experience at all. Got filled between B/A a lot. It were weekly options with maximum deviation of 5% from atm and thus quite liquid though. But I would prefer putting in a lmt and moving it up or down if 'possible'.
 
SPX midpoint or better nearly 100% of the time. The broker has representation in the crowd, so at an added cost. Pretty much the same with VIX. The street has known for years not to trade the screen markets. Fast markets are different.
 
I thought that market orders are matched against limit orders. Sounds like every market order has a 100 mS auction process and if no takers, then it hits the best bid if selling and ask if buying?

I'm not 100% sure, but occasionally I do get better prices than the market/worst price, and quite a few times for sure better than my own limit price. I don't recall placing market orders except when by mistake or on high liquidity options on SPY, APPL, etc, but sometimes I do get better prices than my limit orders.
Theoretically there should be no difference between market vs "wrong" limit orders. Let's say that you want to pay $3.50 for a 5-wide spread but, for example, it may be worth closer to $2.50 and someone else is willing to sell it for that much regardless of the bids/asks on the legs. In such case they should be able to sell it to you for $2.50 via an auction regardless whether your order is market or limit. Otherwise auctions may not make sense to improve the price only for limit orders but not market orders.

There is also possibility that your order (whether market or limit) may match existing orders in the spread book (aka complex order book), where other limit orders are held until their price is matched. In such case you also won't see the right prices on bids/asks of the individual legs, while the full combo may already be priced better and waiting to be filled.
 
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