You own shares that are just sitting there. A covered call lets you rent them out for cash while you wait. It's one of the few options strategies considered conservative enough for everyday investors.
But "conservative" doesn't mean "free." There's always a trade.
Let's break down what a covered call is, how it works step by step, and where it can cost you.
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What Is a Covered Call?
A covered call is an options move with two parts you do at the same time:
- You own at least 100 shares of a stock.
- You sell someone else the right to buy those shares from you at a set higher price by a set date.
It's called "covered" because you already own the shares you might have to deliver. You're covered. If you sold that right without owning the shares, it would be a "naked" call, which is far riskier.
Two terms do the heavy lifting:
- Strike price - the set price the buyer can buy your shares at.
- Premium - the cash the buyer pays you for that right.
You keep the premium no matter what happens next. That's the appeal.
How a Covered Call Works, Step by Step
Picture it with one batch of shares.
You own 100 shares of a stock trading at $50. You sell a call option with a $55 strike price that expires in a month. Someone pays you a premium - say $200 - for the right to buy your shares at $55.
Now two things can happen by expiration.
- The stock stays below $55. The buyer has no reason to pay $55 for something they can get cheaper. The option expires worthless. You keep your 100 shares and the $200 premium.
- The stock rises above $55. The buyer exercises their right. Your shares get "called away" - sold at $55. You still keep the $200 premium, plus the gain up to $55, but you miss anything above that.
Either way, that premium is yours the moment you sell the call.
Why Investors Use Covered Calls
A covered call turns a stock you already own into an income machine.
This makes it a favorite for income investing, where the goal is regular cash flow rather than maximum growth. It's especially appealing on stocks you expect to move sideways or rise only modestly.
The benefits:
- Immediate income. The premium hits your account right away.
- A small cushion. If the stock dips a little, the premium offsets some of the loss.
- It works on shares you already hold. You're not buying anything new.
Think of it like owning a rental property. You collect rent every month from an asset you already own. The covered call premium is that rent.
The Trade-Off and Risks of a Covered Call
Here's the catch, and it's an important one.
You cap your upside. If the stock rockets to $70 but your strike was $55, your shares get sold at $55. You collected the premium, but you left big gains on the table. In a strong bull market, that hurts.
You still own the downside. A covered call only cushions a small drop. If the stock falls hard, you lose money on the shares, premium or not. The premium is a thin blanket, not a shield.
You might lose a stock you wanted to keep. If you love the company long term, having it called away in a rally can be frustrating, and selling may trigger capital gains tax.
A quick summary:
| Outcome | What happens | Your result |
|---|---|---|
| Stock flat or down a little | Option expires worthless | Keep shares plus premium |
| Stock up modestly, under strike | Option expires worthless | Keep shares, premium, and the small gain |
| Stock up big, over strike | Shares called away at strike | Keep premium and gain to strike, miss the rest |
| Stock down a lot | Shares lose value | Premium softens, doesn't stop, the loss |
Covered Call vs. Other Options Moves
A covered call is the gentlest corner of the options world.
Compare it to buying a put option, which is a bet a stock will fall or insurance on shares you own. Or a basic stock option, where buying a call is a leveraged bet a stock will rise. Those can be far more aggressive.
If you'd rather not run the strategy trade by trade, a covered call ETF does it automatically across a basket of stocks and pays you the income. It carries the same core trade-off: income now, capped upside later.
If options still feel new, our guide to options trading covers the foundation.
Who Should Use a Covered Call?
A covered call fits an investor who:
- Already owns shares in 100-share blocks.
- Wants steady income more than maximum growth.
- Is comfortable selling the stock at the strike price if it rises.
It's less ideal for beginners still learning how shares work, or for anyone who'd be upset to lose a long-term holding. If you're just building your first portfolio, mastering when to buy a stock and a plan to start investing with small amounts comes first.
The bottom line on a covered call: you trade some future upside for cash today. On the right stock, with the right expectations, that's a smart, low-drama way to get paid. Just go in knowing exactly what you're giving up.
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