Edges
0DTE Scalping Tickers: The 7 Most Liquid Underlyings Ranked for Speed
Photo by Anne Nygård on Unsplash
For a very-short 0DTE scalper, the choice of 0DTE scalping tickers decides your edge before you ever read the chart. You are in and out in seconds to minutes, so the spread you cross on entry and the spread you cross on exit are the trade — not the direction. Pick a thin underlying and the market maker takes your edge twice. Pick a penny-wide one and you keep it. Only seven names carry the liquidity to scalp same-day options cleanly: SPY, QQQ, SPX, IWM, TSLA, NVDA, and AAPL. This article ranks them by what actually matters at the speed you trade — spread, depth, gamma, and the time of day each one is worth touching.
Why only seven tickers are liquid enough to scalp
Thousands of stocks have options. Almost none have daily expiries with penny-wide markets and the depth to absorb repeated round trips. Daily-expiring listings are limited to the major index ETFs, the big cash indices, and a short list of mega-cap single names with the volume to justify them.
For a scalper, liquidity is not a nice-to-have — it is the whole game. Wide spreads quietly tax every trade: a five-cent spread on a contract you hold for ninety seconds is a guaranteed cost before the trade even has a chance to work. The seven tickers below are the only ones where that cost stays small enough to scalp profitably. Everything else is a swing-trade vehicle at best. If you want to understand why some strikes trade tight and others gap, our guide to volume versus open interest breaks down the liquidity signals strike by strike.
The three tiers of 0DTE scalping tickers
The seven names are not interchangeable. They split into three tiers, and the tier tells you most of what you need to know before you ever look at a quote.
| Index ETF — SPY, QQQ, IWM | Cash Index — SPX | Single Stock — TSLA, NVDA, AAPL | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spread | Penny-wide (SPY/QQQ) | Wider, but deep | Wider, widens fast in chop |
| Settlement | Shares, assignment ~nil on 0DTE | Cash, no assignment ever | Shares, headline gap risk |
| Notional | Small — scale 1 contract at a time | ~10x an ETF contract | Flexible |
| Best for | The default scalp vehicle | Size and 60/40 tax | Momentum bursts only |
Index ETFs (SPY, QQQ, IWM) are the bread and butter. SPY and QQQ trade penny-wide with bottomless size — you can scalp them all session and barely feel the spread. IWM is the small-cap cousin: livelier on risk days but the widest spread of the three, so it costs you more per round trip.
The cash index (SPX) behaves differently. It is cash-settled, so there is no assignment and no shares ever change hands. It carries roughly ten times the notional of an ETF contract and gets favourable 60/40 tax treatment. You scalp SPX for size and tax efficiency, not for the cheapest fill.
Single stocks (TSLA, NVDA, AAPL) are the high-octane tier. Gamma bursts pay the most when the stock is trending, but spreads widen the moment momentum stalls. These are momentum-only vehicles — never chop-scalp them.
SPX vs SPY for 0DTE scalping
This is the most common fork a scalper faces, because both expire daily and both are liquid enough to scalp. The right answer depends on your account size, your tax situation, and whether you ever hold into the close.
SPX vs SPY in one line: SPX is cash-settled with 60/40 tax and big notional; SPY is penny-spread with small notional and trivial 0DTE assignment risk. Scalp SPY for the cheapest fills, SPX for size and tax.
| Factor | SPX | SPY |
|---|---|---|
| Settlement | Cash — no shares, no assignment | Physical — shares, but 0DTE assignment is rare |
| Spread | Wider, still deep | Penny-wide — cheapest round trip |
| Notional per contract | ~10x SPY | 1x — scale one at a time |
| Tax | 60/40 (Section 1256) | Short-term capital gains |
| Best scalper fit | Large account, many trades, tax-aware | High-frequency, small size, spread-sensitive |
Most very-short scalpers start on SPY because the penny spread is the single biggest cost they can control. As account size and trade count grow, the 60/40 tax treatment and lower per-contract commission load of SPX start to matter more. Use the picker below to see which fits your own profile.
The intraday clock: when each ticker is worth scalping
A 0DTE option's two defining forces — gamma and theta — are not constant through the day. Gamma (how fast your option tracks the underlying) is highest near the money and rises into the close as expiry approaches. Theta (decay) grinds relentlessly, and it accelerates through the afternoon. For a scalper, this creates a clear daily rhythm.
The opening hour delivers the most range on the tightest spreads — this is where the index ETFs shine and where most scalpers make their money. Midday is a trap: range collapses, theta keeps eating, and even SPY chops you to pieces. The power hour reawakens gamma, and the index names move fast and clean. The final thirty minutes are pure pin risk — moves get violent and unpredictable, and this is exactly when cash settlement (SPX) protects you from a surprise assignment on a runner you forgot to close.
When the single-stock names are worth the wider spread
TSLA, NVDA, and AAPL ask you to pay a wider spread than SPY. That is only worth it when their gamma burst is large enough to clear the extra cost — which means momentum, not chop.
Among the three, NVDA is the most liquid single-name 0DTE and carries the most explosive gamma — the biggest pay-off when it runs, but spreads that gap fast when it stalls. TSLA is the gappiest and most headline-driven, brilliant when trending and brutal in range. AAPL has the tightest single-name spread but the slowest realized volatility, so its scalp range is smaller — it rewards a clean trend day over fast chop. If you want to read the institutional footprints that often precede these single-stock moves, our breakdown of options flow and smart money shows what to watch.
The full scorecard
Here is every one of the seven 0DTE scalping tickers scored on the three things that decide your fills — spread tightness, liquidity depth, and gamma burst potential — plus the best window to trade each. Sort it by whatever matters most to your style.
The takeaway: default to two, reach for the rest
For the very-short 0DTE scalper, the decision tree is short. Default to SPY and QQQ — penny spreads, deep size, and the cleanest fills carry the vast majority of profitable scalps. Step up to SPX when your account is large enough that size and 60/40 tax outweigh the wider spread, or when you want cash settlement to remove pin risk. Treat IWM as a secondary index when small-caps are the story, accepting its slightly worse spread. Reach for TSLA, NVDA, or AAPL only when a clear catalyst gives you momentum worth the extra cost — and never to scalp chop.
Above all, respect the clock. The open and the power hour are where the index names pay; midday is where edges quietly die. The best scalpers are not the ones who trade all seven all day — they are the ones who know which ticker to touch, and when to sit on their hands.