Covered Call: Definition, Strategy & Payoff Explained
How a Covered Call Works
The mechanics are straightforward. You own 100 shares of a stock and sell one call contract against them. That call gives the buyer the right to purchase your shares at the strike price before the expiration date. In return, you pocket the premium immediately.
The word “covered” is critical here — you already own the underlying shares. If the buyer exercises the call, you deliver shares you hold. This is the opposite of a naked call, where you’d sell a call without owning the stock and face theoretically unlimited risk.
Covered Call Payoff Structure
| Scenario | Stock Price at Expiry | What Happens | Your Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock drops | Below purchase price | Call expires worthless | Loss on shares, partially offset by premium |
| Stock flat | Near purchase price | Call expires worthless | Keep premium as pure income |
| Stock rises moderately | Between purchase price and strike | Call expires worthless | Stock gain + full premium kept |
| Stock surges | Above strike price | Call is exercised — shares are called away | Gain capped at strike price + premium |
Covered Call Example
You own 100 shares of XYZ at $50 per share. You sell one $55 call expiring in 45 days and collect $1.50 per share ($150 total).
If XYZ stays at $50: The call expires worthless. You keep the $150 premium and still hold your shares. That’s a 3% return in 45 days just from selling the call.
If XYZ rises to $60: The call is exercised. You sell at $55 (not $60), plus keep the $1.50 premium. Your total gain is $650 — but you miss out on the extra $500 above the strike.
If XYZ drops to $45: The call expires worthless. You lose $500 on the shares but the $150 premium cushions the blow, making your net loss $350.
When to Use a Covered Call
Covered calls work best in three situations:
Neutral to mildly bullish outlook. You think the stock will drift sideways or rise modestly. The premium gives you a return even if the stock goes nowhere.
Income generation. Selling calls month after month creates a steady income stream on top of any dividends. This is why covered calls are one of the most popular strategies for income-focused investors.
Willing to sell at the strike. If you’d be happy to exit at $55 anyway, the covered call gets you paid while you wait for that price.
Covered Call vs. Protective Put
| Feature | Covered Call | Protective Put |
|---|---|---|
| Direction | Sell a call | Buy a put |
| Cash flow | You receive premium | You pay premium |
| Upside | Capped at strike + premium | Unlimited |
| Downside protection | Minimal (premium cushion only) | Strong (losses capped at strike) |
| Best for | Income, neutral outlook | Hedging, bearish worry |
The Greeks in a Covered Call
Since you’re short the call, the Greeks work a bit differently than for a long option position:
Theta (time decay) works in your favor. Every day that passes, the call you sold loses value — that’s money you get to keep. This is the primary income engine of the strategy.
Delta is reduced. Selling the call partially offsets the delta of your long stock position, lowering your net directional exposure.
Vega works in your favor when implied volatility drops. If IV decreases after you sell the call, the option loses value faster — good for you as the seller.
Risks and Limitations
Capped upside is the main trade-off. If the stock rallies hard, you miss gains above the strike. This is the most common source of regret for covered call sellers.
Downside is barely reduced. The premium offers a thin cushion, not a floor. In a serious sell-off, you’re still exposed to almost the full drop.
Assignment risk. If the stock trades above the strike before expiration — especially near an ex-dividend date — the call can be exercised early, and your shares get called away.
Key Takeaways
- A covered call means selling a call option against shares you own to collect premium income.
- Maximum profit is capped at the strike price plus the premium received.
- The strategy works best with a neutral to mildly bullish outlook.
- Time decay is your ally — you profit as the option loses value each day.
- Covered calls provide minimal downside protection compared to a protective put.
FAQ
What happens if my covered call gets exercised?
You sell your 100 shares at the strike price, regardless of where the stock is trading. You keep the premium you collected when you sold the call. Your shares are gone, and your profit on the trade is capped.
Can I close a covered call before expiration?
Yes. You can buy back the call at any time before expiration. If the stock stayed flat or dropped, the call will be cheaper than what you sold it for — you keep the difference as profit and still hold your shares.
How far out-of-the-money should I sell the call?
There’s no universal answer. Selling closer to at-the-money gives a higher premium but more risk of assignment. Selling further out-of-the-money gives less premium but more room for the stock to rise. Most covered call sellers target a delta of around 0.20–0.35.
Is a covered call a good strategy for beginners?
It’s one of the most beginner-friendly options strategies because you already own the underlying shares, which limits your risk. Most brokers approve covered calls at the lowest options trading level.