๐Ÿ“Š VIX Volatility Index Tracker

The CBOE Volatility Index โ€” Wall Street's "fear gauge." Full daily history from 1990. Sourced from FRED (VIXCLS).

Last updated: Mar 31, 2026, 12:00 AM UTCยทSource: FREDยทVIXCLS
โš ๏ธ
Data may be stale. This data was last refreshed on Mar 31, 2026, 12:00 AM UTC. FRED data updates may be delayed during weekends, holidays, or API outages. We refresh automatically โ€” check back soon.
25.3060+
Current Fear Level
High / Anxious
VIX: 25.25 ยท Percentile: 83% ยท 2026-03-31
7-Day Avg
27.54
30-Day Avg
23.97
All-Time Avg
19.46
Percentile
83%
All-Time High
82.69
2020-03-16
All-Time Low
9.14
2017-11-03
Median
17.61
Data Points
9,155
Since 1990

VIX Over Time

Low / Calm (0โ€“15)Moderate (15โ€“25)High / Anxious (25โ€“35)Extreme / Panic (35โ€“โˆž)

๐Ÿ“Œ Notable VIX Spikes

DateEventVIX Close
Mar 16, 2020COVID-19 Panic82.69
Nov 20, 2008Lehman Collapse Aftermath80.86
Oct 24, 2008Financial Crisis79.13
Aug 8, 2011US Downgrade48
May 20, 2010Flash Crash45.79
Aug 31, 1998LTCM Crisis44.28
Aug 24, 2015China Devaluation40.74
Jul 24, 2002WorldCom Scandal39.86
Oct 27, 1997Asian Financial Crisis31.12

๐Ÿ“‹ Daily Data

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Understanding the VIX

The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) measures the market's expectation of 30-day forward-looking volatility, derived from S&P 500 index options. Often called the "fear gauge" โ€” spikes signal panic buying of protection.

Fear zones: 0โ€“15 (Calm) โ†’ 15โ€“25 (Moderate) โ†’ 25โ€“35 (Anxious) โ†’ 35+ (Panic).

Grey shaded regions mark NBER recession periods. VIX spikes tend to precede or coincide with recessions. Dashed red lines mark notable historical crises.