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Schwab unlocks 'covered call' stock strategy

Options trading keeps breaking volume records, and retail investors now drive a growing share of the daily activity once dominated by Wall Street desks. Most people still assume every single options trade carries the kind of outsized risk that could wipe out a brokerage account in one bad session.

One widely used approach mitigates that problem by using shares you already own to generate a small, predictable income stream without leverage. Charles Schwab recently published a detailed guide on this strategy, spelling out the mechanics through a clear example that almost any retail investor can follow.

How the "covered call" options trading strategy works

A covered call is a neutral-to-bullish options trade built by selling a call option against 100 shares you already own, according to Schwab. You collect a cash premium upfront for agreeing to sell those shares at a set strike if the option gets assigned to you.

If the stock stays below the strike by expiration, you keep both the shares you own and the premium you collected on the trade. If the stock closes above the strike price, the option moves in the money, and the shares will likely be called away at that level.

Why retail investors are pouring into options trading

Traders cleared roughly 110 million options contracts on Oct. 10, 2025, topping the prior daily volume record, according to Options Clearing Corporation data. Retail traders drove much of that growth, pushing their largest total buying spree since the meme-stock peak in January 2021, reported FinancialContent.

Covered call ETFs absorbed much of that retail interest because each fund packages the trade into a share paying monthly income, according to Morningstar. JPMorgan's JEPI fund now holds approximately $45 billion in assets, with JEPQ and newer peers carrying tens of billions more, Investing.com explained.

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That level of adoption sends a clear signal that a large segment of investors wants equity exposure paired with steady income, not pure stock-price upside. Schwab, Robinhood, and Interactive Brokers all booked higher retail options engagement over the past year as commission-free trading attracted users, FinancialContent noted.

Short-dated contracts have become the other engine of the boom, with zero-days-to-expiration (0DTE) options accounting for about 24% of all U.S.-listed options volume in 2025, up from 21.5% the year before, according to Traders Magazine.

Retail traders account for approximately 50% of all options volume and an estimated 50–60% of SPX 0DTE trading, confirmed Cboe Global Markets.

Willie B. Thomas/Getty Images

Covered call ETFs fuel the trend

Covered call ETFs have become the mainstream on-ramp to this strategy for investors who prefer not to manage individual option contracts on their own shares. These funds distribute monthly income from call premiums, giving shareholders a steady payout that can exceed typical dividend equity yields, as stated by etf.com.

The trade-off is that you give up much of the rally potential when the index climbs sharply, so long-term total returns often lag the benchmark. JEPI, JEPQ, and XYLD have drawn investors with monthly distributions, though their long-term total returns often lag those of a plain index fund, according to 24/7 Wall St.

Picking a strike price without getting burned

Strike selection drives the outcome of every covered call, making it the single most important decision you will make on each new trade entered. Three anchor points help when picking a strike, and each grounds the decision in real market data rather than guesswork, according to Schwab.

  • A strike price you would willingly accept to sell the stock
  • A strike sitting near a clear technical resistance level on the chart
  • The call's delta, which roughly estimates the chance it expires in the money

"Take your time developing the skill set essential to successful option trading. It won't take that long to master the three required skills: stock selection, option selection, and position management. Consider starting with covered call writing, a low-risk option strategy that is relatively intuitive to retail investors and allowed in our self-directed IRA accounts," Blue Collar Investor Corp. President Alan Ellman told Stock Investor.

A call option with a 0.21 delta has roughly a 21% chance of ending up in the money at expiration, according to Schwab's guide. Delta shifts as the underlying stock moves, so traders use it as a rough guide to probability rather than a precise forecast of the final outcome.

Tax treatment and assignment timing for selling calls

Premiums you collect from selling calls are typically treated as short-term capital gains, taxed at your ordinary income rate in a taxable brokerage account.

Running the strategy inside a Roth or Traditional IRA can defer or eliminate those taxes, a reason many income-focused retirees favor that account type. Assignment can occur anytime before expiration on American-style options, so monitor the position around ex-dividend dates when assignment risk tends to spike, according to Schwab.

Where covered calls fit your plan and where they fall short

Covered calls tend to pay off in range-bound markets where the stock drifts sideways or rises slowly rather than breaking out on strong momentum. They often fit income-focused portfolios, tax-advantaged IRAs, or positions you already plan to trim at a slightly higher price over the coming weeks.

They fit poorly around earnings releases, product launches, or other catalysts where the stock could gap well above any sensible strike price you pick. Covered calls also fit long-term investors who want to sell shares at a target price while collecting extra income on the way, according to Fidelity.

Best steps for investors weighing a covered call trade

Covered calls work best as a measured income tool, not a way to squeeze extra returns from a held stock. There is no single "right" way to use them. The key is stating your goals in advance and having a plan for the stock rising, falling, or staying flat, according to Fidelity.

Size the trade so assignment wouldn't derail your broader plan. FINRA points out that while only about 7% of options are exercised overall, an individual seller can see some, all, or none of their short positions assigned.

Paper trade for a few expiration cycles first, the Options Industry Council and FINRA suggest running clean paper cycles tracking premiums, realized income, and hypothetical assignments before committing capital, as FinancePolice indicated.

Talk to a tax professional before scaling, since premium income, assignment gains, and dividend timing interact in tricky ways. Fidelity explains that a premium isn't income when the call is sold but only when it expires, is closed, or is assigned, and an in-the-money qualified covered call can suspend the stock's holding period.

Keep clean records. The IRS requires investors to keep detailed records of their securities activity, and each covered call must be listed on Form 8949 and rolled to Schedule D, with the premium embedded in the stock sale proceeds on assignment. The taxpayer, not the broker, is ultimately responsible for basis accuracy according to LegalClarity.

Used with discipline, a covered call can generate extra income from shares you already own while still collecting dividends, as long as the call isn't exercised before expiration.

Related: Schwab debunks costly tax bracket myth

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This story was originally published April 25, 2026 at 6:33 AM.

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