F&O lot size revisions: what they do to your positions, and how to find the current lot

The short answer

A lot-size revision is not retroactive. A contract series that is already listed runs to its expiry on the original lot size; only new series introduced after the effective date carry the revised lot. So around a revision the same underlying can have two lot sizes live at once, on different expiries, which is what makes rollovers and spreads need care. For the number itself, do not trust a static article: look up the live lot in the exchange contract file or the market-lot circular, and treat any printed figure as accurate only as of a date.

The news framing of a lot-size revision is a single number changing, and most write-ups stop there. For a trader who is actually holding or rolling positions through the change, the number is the least of it. What matters is that the change lands unevenly across expiries, that it moves your per-lot notional and margin only on the contracts you open next, and that it quietly shifts your tax turnover. This is the practical, position-facing guide. For the regulatory reason lots are revised at all, the contract-value band that drives it, and the full chronology, read the companion piece: why SEBI revises F&O lot sizes. Here we take the mechanism as given and work out what it does to you.

The one thing most pages miss: a revision does not resize what you already hold

Start with the mechanic that saves the most money because it is the one most sources skip. A lot-size revision does not reach back and change contracts that already exist. Every series that was listed before the effective date keeps its original lot size, its original quantity per lot, and its original margin, all the way to its own expiry. The revised lot attaches only to series that the exchange introduces on or after the effective date.

That single rule has an immediate consequence that surprises people. During the changeover window, the running near-month, listed under the old specification, still trades on the old lot until it expires. Meanwhile a farther-dated series, freshly listed under the new specification, is already trading on the new lot. For that window, one underlying carries both lot sizes at the same time, split across expiries. Nothing is wrong; this is exactly how the transition is designed, and the exchange spells it out in the revision circular.

A revision lands mid-life: the old lot runs to expiry while the new lot lists forward A horizontal timeline. Before the effective date the near-month and next series both carry the old lot. On the effective date the revision applies to new series only. The already-listed near-month keeps the old lot until its expiry, while a newly listed far-month series carries the new lot, so both lot sizes coexist for a window. One revision, two lot sizes live at once Effective date (new series only) Near-month, listed earlier · OLD lot runs to its expiry expiry Far-month, listed after the date · NEW lot forward overlap: both lots trade The revision changes the rule for new series only. Contracts already in existence are left untouched until they expire.
Old series run out; new series come in changed. The revision is a forward rule, not a rewrite. Your open near-month is on the old lot until it expires; the next series the exchange lists is on the new lot. The overlap is where an unexamined rollover changes your quantity.

What actually happens to your position, case by case

Reduce the mechanic to the four situations a trader is actually in when a circular lands. The pattern is consistent: anything already open is safe on the old lot, and anything you open next inherits the new one.

What a lot revision does to you, by situation
Your situationWhat happens to the lotWhat you must do
Holding an already-listed seriesNo change. Old lot, old quantity, old margin to expiryNothing. Let it run; it was never resized
Opening a fresh position after the dateNew lot on the newly listed seriesRe-size in quantity terms against the new notional and margin
Rolling near-month to a farther expiryExit old-lot series, enter new-lot seriesOne lot is no longer the same quantity on both legs. Size the roll by quantity
Running a calendar spread across the dateLegs can sit on different lotsMatch the legs by quantity, not lot count, or the hedge is unbalanced

The rollover row is where real money goes astray. A roll is a close of the near expiry and an open of a farther one. If the near leg is an old-lot series and the far leg is a new-lot series, rolling one lot into one lot no longer preserves your quantity, and quantity is what your exposure and margin are actually built on. A trader who rolls by habit, one lot out and one lot in, can end the roll holding a position materially larger or smaller than intended. The discipline is simple: before any roll across a revision, read the destination series lot in the contract file and match the roll by quantity.

The spread trap. The same mismatch breaks a calendar or diagonal spread built across the changeover. If one leg carries the old lot and the other the new lot, equal lot counts are unequal quantities, and the two legs no longer offset cleanly. Balance a cross-revision spread by matched quantity, and expect the leg counts to look uneven as a result.

The margin and notional impact, before and after

The lot is the multiplier that turns a price into money. One lot of an index or single-stock derivative is worth the lot size times the underlying price, and the margin the exchange demands, the SPAN plus exposure requirement, scales with that rupee notional. So the moment a revision changes the lot on the series you trade next, it changes both the value of one lot and the capital to carry it. This bites hardest when a revision raises the contract value, or when SEBI lifts the minimum contract-value band, because then one new lot is a bigger commitment than one old lot was.

One lot before and after an upward revision, illustrative Two pairs of bars. On the left, one old lot has a smaller notional and a smaller margin. On the right, one new lot after an upward revision has a larger notional and a larger margin. Values are illustrative to show direction, not real figures. A raised lot lifts both notional and margin (illustrative) One OLD lot One NEW lot (after upward revision) notional ~₹10L margin notional ~₹16L margin Illustrative only. The direction is the point: a larger lot means more rupees per lot and more margin per lot, so the same view now needs more capital.
The same view now costs more per lot. Because margin follows notional, a raised lot raises the capital to hold a single contract. The floor effect is real: when one lot is the smallest step you can trade, a higher lot raises the minimum capital to take the trade at all, which is how revisions can price a small account out. The mechanics of that floor are in position sizing for Indian retail.

Two practical points follow. First, only the new-lot series is affected: your existing old-lot position keeps its old margin until it expires, so do not expect a margin call on it from the revision alone. Second, size in quantity, not lots. If your risk rule allowed a certain exposure at the old contract value, the same lot count is a different exposure now, so recompute how many new lots your risk budget permits against the new notional, and confirm one lot still fits the account. The lot revision does not change your risk appetite; it changes the granularity you can express it in.

How to find the current lot for any contract

This is the evergreen half of the question, and the honest answer is that a lot size is not something to memorise or to trust from an article. The exchange sets each lot so the contract value sits inside a defined band, and it revises the lot from time to time to keep it there, so the number is a moving target by design. The authoritative source is always the exchange itself, in one of three places.

Where to look up the live lot, and what each source gives you
SourceWhat it gives youUpdate cadence
Exchange contract specification pageThe current market lot per underlying, alongside tick size and expiry structureKept current; reflects the latest revision
Daily contract master file (for the National Stock Exchange, the NSE_FO_contract file)The machine-readable lot for every live series, the exact source your platform readsPublished each trading day
Market-lot revision circularOld and new lot, the effective date, and the transition rule for existing seriesIssued when a revision is announced, periodically

The workflow is short. To confirm a live lot, read the contract specification page or the daily contract file. To understand a change that is coming, read the market-lot circular, which is the only source that also tells you the effective date and how existing series transition. Any lot quoted in an article, including this one, is a snapshot that can be superseded at the next review, so use it to learn the mechanism and confirm the live figure at the source before you trade or size.

Where to find the current lot: the exchange, in three places A flow from the question, what is the current lot, to three exchange sources: contract specification page, daily contract file, and market-lot circular, which together give a verified current lot. The current-lot lookup Q: what is the current lot? Contract specification page live lot per underlying Daily contract file machine-readable, every series Market-lot circular a coming change + effective date Verified current lot, confirmed at the source
Go to the exchange, not the archive. The specification page and daily contract file give the live lot; the market-lot circular is the one source that also carries the effective date and the transition rule for existing series. Confirm the figure at the source, and treat any article number as indicative only.

The tax-turnover interaction most traders never connect

Here is a second-order effect that sits well outside the news framing. For income-tax purposes, F&O turnover is not the notional value you traded. It is the absolute sum of your profits and losses, adding the size of each gain and each loss regardless of sign. That definition is what makes a lot revision touch your tax position at all.

The link is direct. A larger lot makes each point of price movement a larger rupee amount, so the profit or loss booked on one lot grows in proportion. Because turnover is built from the absolute size of those per-trade results, a larger lot inflates the turnover figure for the same trading behaviour. Trade the identical view in the identical number of lots after an upward revision, and the turnover you report can be higher, purely because each lot now moves more money. Since the tax-audit thresholds are defined against turnover, that shift can matter at the margin of an audit trigger. The full mechanics of the turnover definition and the thresholds are in the dedicated guide to F&O taxation in India; the point to carry here is only that a lot revision is quietly a turnover event, not merely a sizing one.

The recent revisions, in one paragraph

To place this in time without re-deriving it: under a SEBI framework announced on 1 October 2024, the minimum contract value for index derivatives was raised to a band of roughly 15 lakh to 20 lakh rupees, up from the earlier 5 lakh to 10 lakh region. Exchanges lifted index lot sizes for new series from 20 November 2024, with existing weekly and monthly series running to expiry on their old lots and longer-dated series transitioning in late December 2024, an event that showed the mid-life mechanic in full public view. The band is then reset periodically as index levels drift, including a further index-lot revision effective from the January 2026 series, where index lots were adjusted downward to keep the contract value inside the band as levels had risen. Those specific figures are as of their dates and should be confirmed live. The full rationale, the band arithmetic, and the chronology are the subject of the companion article on why SEBI revises F&O lot sizes; the lot size as an idea, rather than a number, is covered in what a lot size is in F&O.

Where this sits, and what to actually do

A lot-size revision is a routine, forward-looking adjustment, not a shock to the book you already hold. Reading it correctly is three habits. Recognise that your open series are untouched and only new series carry the change. Size and roll in quantity, not in lot count, whenever a revision straddles your positions, so a rollover or a spread does not silently change your exposure. And treat the lot as a number you verify at the exchange, not one you memorise, because it is built to move. That upstream discipline, sizing from risk and reading the specification before acting, is exactly what the method we teach is built around; the revision is just an occasion that rewards it.

Frequently asked questions

No. A lot-size revision is not retroactive. Any contract series that is already listed continues to trade and settle on its original lot size right through to its expiry. Only new series introduced on or after the effective date are listed with the revised lot. So the position you are already holding keeps its old lot, its old quantity, and its old margin; nothing about it is resized under you mid-life.

Because a revision only applies going forward. Around the changeover, the near-month series that was listed before the effective date still carries the old lot until it expires, while a farther-dated series listed after the effective date already carries the new lot. For a short window the same underlying has both lot sizes live at once, on different expiries. This is normal, documented in the exchange circular, and the reason rollovers around a revision need care.

Rolling means closing the near expiry and opening a farther one. If you roll across a revision, you are exiting an old-lot series and entering a new-lot series, so one lot no longer equals the same quantity on both sides. Rolling one old lot into one new lot changes your quantity and therefore your exposure and margin. Before rolling, check the destination series lot in the contract file and size the roll by quantity, not by lot count.

For a new-lot series, yes, because margin scales with the rupee notional of one lot. If a revision raises the contract value, or the exchange raises the minimum contract-value band, one lot of the new series carries a larger notional and a larger SPAN plus exposure margin than one old lot did. Your existing old-lot position is unaffected until it expires. The higher per-lot capital is what can price a small account out of a single lot.

From the exchange, not from a static article. The authoritative sources are the exchange contract specification pages, the daily contract master file the exchange publishes (for the National Stock Exchange this is the NSE_FO_contract file), and the market-lot revision circulars the exchange issues periodically. Any lot printed in an article is only accurate as of a date. Treat it as indicative and confirm the live number in the contract file before you trade or size.

Because lot sizes are deliberately not fixed. The exchange sets each lot so the contract value stays inside a defined band as the underlying price drifts, and it revises the lot periodically to keep it there. A number that is correct today can be superseded at the next review. That is why a good reference teaches the lookup and the mechanism rather than memorising a figure that will date. The band logic, not the number, is the durable thing to know.

F&O turnover for tax purposes is the absolute sum of your profits and losses, not the notional value traded. Because a larger lot makes each point of price move a larger rupee amount, the profit or loss booked per lot grows, and so does the absolute figure that feeds your turnover. Trading the same view in the same number of lots after an upward revision can therefore report a higher turnover, which matters for the tax-audit thresholds.

Yes. Under a SEBI framework announced on 1 October 2024, the minimum contract value for index derivatives was raised to a band of about 15 lakh to 20 lakh rupees, and exchanges lifted index lot sizes for new series from 20 November 2024, with longer-dated series transitioning in late December 2024. The band is then reset periodically as index levels move, including a further index-lot revision effective from the January 2026 series. The full rationale and chronology sit in the companion article.

Yes, for anything you open in the new-lot series. If your sizing rule was tuned to an old contract value, the same number of lots is now a different exposure, and the per-lot capital requirement has moved. Recompute how many lots your risk budget allows against the new notional, and confirm one lot still fits your account. The lot is the smallest step you can trade, so a raised lot raises the minimum capital to take the position at all.

Sources

Where the facts come from

  • SEBI index-derivatives framework, 1 October 2024. Raised the minimum contract value for index derivatives to a band of about 15 lakh to 20 lakh rupees at review, the change that drove the November 2024 upward lot revision. sebi.gov.in
  • Exchange market-lot revision circulars. The National Stock Exchange publishes periodic circulars revising the market lot of derivative contracts, stating the old and new lot, the effective date, and that existing series continue on their original lot to expiry while new series carry the revised lot. nseindia.com
  • Contract specification and daily contract file. The exchange contract specification pages and the daily contract master file (the NSE_FO_contract file) carry the live market lot per underlying, and are the authoritative place to confirm a current lot. nseindia.com
  • F&O turnover definition. For income-tax purposes, F&O turnover is computed as the absolute sum of profits and losses, not the notional value traded, which is why a lot revision changes the turnover figure. See the dedicated F&O taxation guide for the thresholds.
Educational note. This guide explains how lot-size revisions interact with existing positions, margin, rollovers, and tax turnover, and where to verify the current lot. It is not a recommendation to trade or invest, and it is not investment advice. Illustrative figures are labelled illustrative and are not real results. Bharath Shiksha is an educational publisher, not a SEBI-registered investment adviser or research analyst.

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