The VIX is the market’s real-time measure of expected volatility — a number that rises when investors are fearful and falls when markets are calm. When you see headlines like “the VIX spiked to 35,” that’s the market pricing in unusually large swings ahead. Understanding what the VIX actually measures — and what it doesn’t — is one of the most practically useful things any stock market participant can learn.
What the VIX Actually Measures
The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) measures the market’s expectation of how much the S&P 500 will move over the next 30 days, expressed as an annualized percentage. It is derived from the prices of S&P 500 index options (ticker: SPX) — specifically, a weighted blend of out-of-the-money calls and puts expiring approximately 30 days out.
Because option buyers pay more when they expect bigger moves, the VIX rises when options are expensive (high demand for protection) and falls when options are cheap (calm markets). This is why it is often called the fear gauge: fear and uncertainty make people buy options, and buying options drives the VIX up.
The VIX was conceived by professors Menachem Brenner and Dan Galai in 1989 and developed into its calculation methodology by consultant Bob Whaley at the CBOE’s request in 1992. Real-time reporting began on January 19, 1993. In 2003, working with Goldman Sachs, the CBOE updated the methodology to use S&P 500 options (SPX) instead of the original S&P 100 options (OEX). The original version is now called VXO.
From Number to Expectation: What “VIX 20” Really Means
The VIX is quoted as an annualized standard deviation. A VIX of 20 means the market expects the S&P 500 to move roughly ±20% over the next year — but that’s an annual figure. Most people care about shorter horizons.
You can scale the VIX to a shorter window using the square root of time:
- Expected 30-day move: VIX ÷ √12 (since there are 12 months in a year)
- Expected daily move: VIX ÷ √252 (there are approximately 252 trading days per year)
So a VIX of 20 implies the market expects the S&P 500 to move roughly ±5.8% per month (20 ÷ √12 ≈ 5.8%) or about ±1.3% per day (20 ÷ √252 ≈ 1.26%). These are one-standard-deviation ranges, meaning the market assigns roughly a 68% probability of the actual move falling within that band.
When VIX spikes to 40, those same calculations give ±11.5% per month and ±2.5% per day — the market is pricing in very large, sustained swings.
A Brief History of the VIX
The VIX has two defining features across its three-decade history. First, it spends most of its time in a relatively calm range. Second, when it moves, it can move with extraordinary speed. The table below captures the major milestones and peak readings:
| Event | VIX Peak (Close) | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 2008 Financial Crisis | 80.74 | Lehman collapse; intraday peak 89.53 (Oct 24, 2008) |
| 2020 COVID-19 Crash | 82.69 | March 16, 2020 — highest closing level since VIX inception |
| 2018 “Volmageddon” | 37.32 | VIX doubled in one day (Feb 5, 2018); short-vol products imploded |
| April 2026 Tariff Shock | 35.30 | 52-week high as of May 2026; trade policy uncertainty spike |
| May 4, 2026 (current) | 18.29 | Elevated but below the year’s peak; 52-week low was 13.38 |
The VIX and the S&P 500: An Inverse Relationship
The VIX has a historically strong inverse relationship with the S&P 500. When stocks sell off sharply, investors rush to buy protective puts on the S&P 500, driving up option prices — and therefore the VIX. When markets rally steadily, demand for protection ebbs and the VIX drifts lower.
This is not a perfect inverse. During slow grinding bear markets, VIX can remain elevated even as stocks stabilize. And during some sharp selloffs, the VIX may lag if the decline is steady rather than panicked. But as a rule of thumb, a rising VIX signals fear and a falling VIX signals complacency.
Historical VIX Peaks at a Glance
VIX Levels: A Practical Field Guide
There are no official CBOE thresholds for “calm” vs “fearful,” but market practitioners have developed broadly accepted rules of thumb based on historical behavior:
| VIX Range | Market Mood | Typical Context | Implied 30-Day Move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 15 | Very calm / complacent | Low-volatility bull market; protection is cheap | ≤ 4.3% |
| 15 – 20 | Normal / mild concern | Average market conditions; moderate uncertainty | 4.3% – 5.8% |
| 20 – 30 | Elevated fear | Macro uncertainty, policy risk, geopolitical stress | 5.8% – 8.7% |
| 30 – 40 | High fear / stress | Significant selloff, financial stress, crisis risk | 8.7% – 11.5% |
| Above 40 | Extreme panic | Acute crisis (pandemic shock, financial system stress) | > 11.5% |
How Investors Use the VIX
The VIX is a diagnostic tool, not a trading signal on its own. Here is how professionals typically use it:
Gauging market sentiment. A low VIX (below 15) means the market is pricing in smooth sailing. Some investors interpret this as a sign of complacency — when protection is cheap, it may be worth buying. A high VIX means options are expensive, and buying protection now costs more.
Timing hedges. Portfolio managers often buy S&P 500 puts when VIX is low (cheap insurance) rather than after a spike (expensive insurance). The VIX informs not whether to hedge but when it is cost-effective to do so.
Assessing risk environment. Many risk models use VIX as an input to scale position sizes. In high-VIX regimes, a 1% daily move in the S&P 500 might be unremarkable; in a low-VIX regime, it is extreme. Using the same position size in both environments leads to wildly inconsistent risk.
Volatility trading. VIX futures, options on VIX, and volatility-linked ETPs let traders take direct positions on future volatility levels — a practice that requires understanding far beyond the basics covered here.
What the VIX Doesn’t Tell You
The VIX has real blind spots. First, it measures implied volatility — what the options market is pricing in, not what will actually happen. The market can price in a large move that never materializes, or miss a shock that comes out of nowhere.
Second, the VIX covers only the S&P 500. It says nothing directly about small-cap stocks, bonds, currencies, or individual names. A company-specific blowup won’t necessarily register in the VIX unless it’s large enough to move the index.
Third, the VIX is symmetric — it cannot tell you whether the expected move will be up or down. A VIX of 30 means the market expects big moves; it does not say in which direction. During crisis periods, big moves are usually down; but some high-VIX recoveries have seen enormous upside swings as well.
Finally, VIX can remain elevated for extended periods even as the market stabilizes. Mean reversion in volatility is real but slow — don’t assume a high VIX will quickly return to a low VIX just because the acute crisis has passed.
What to Learn Next
Once you understand the VIX, the logical next step is understanding how option prices are determined — specifically, the Black-Scholes model and its inputs (including implied volatility, which is precisely what the VIX aggregates across S&P 500 options). From there, the options Greeks — delta, gamma, theta, and vega — give you the tools to understand how an option responds to changes in stock price, time, and volatility.
Sources
- Wikipedia: VIX — historical peaks (2008, 2018, 2020), creation history, methodology description
- Cboe: VIX Product Page — current VIX level (18.29 as of May 4, 2026), 52-week range, inverse S&P 500 relationship
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.