Jump Diffusion in Credit Default Modeling Security Prices experience random fluctuations. Sometimes the magnitude of the change is so large within a very short period of time that Brownian motion fails to model such behavior. In a 1973 pioneering paper by Merton, Poisson jump diffusion was introduced to model discontinuous stock price movements and an option pricing formula similar to that of Black-Scholes was obtained. Here we apply the same jump diffusion to the credit default index model (structural model) to address the concerns of short time behavior not well resolved in a Gaussian diffusion model. With the introduction of jump diffusion to the model, a partial integro-differential equation with a free boundary is derived, where the extra non-local boundary condition is imposed to match the market information. We will show that the introduction of jumps indeed improves the behavior of the model by numerical results. Furthermore, it is possible to use this approach to bridge the gap between two existing types of credit default models.