Covered Calls: How to Get Paid for Stock You Already Own
Beginner-friendly · 7 min read · Updated April 2026
If you own 100 shares of a stock and wouldn't mind selling them at a higher price, there's a trade that pays you cash today for being willing to sell. It's called a covered call — and it's the most common way stock owners turn boring shares into monthly income.
Most beginners think of options as risky bets. Covered calls are the opposite. You’re not buying anything; you’re being paid a fee to offer your stock at a price you already like.
The easiest way to think about it
A covered call works like renting out a house you already own.
If they never exercise that right, you keep the rent and the house. If they do, you sell at a price you already agreed was fine.
In market language, you’re selling the right to buy your stock at a specific price, for a specific number of days, in exchange for cash today. That cash is called a premium.
A real example with AAPL
Say you own 100 shares of Apple (AAPL), currently trading at $187. You’d be happy to sell them at $195 — that’s an 8-point gain you’d take if the stock ran there.
Today, you can sell one call contract at the $195 strike, expiring in 35 days, for about $2.40 per share. Because each contract covers 100 shares, that’s $240 cash in your account right now.
What happens next — three possible endings
In 35 days, the contract expires. One of three things happens to your AAPL position:
AAPL drops below $187
The call expires worthless. You keep your shares and the $240.
AAPL drifts between $187 and $195 (most common)
The call expires worthless. You keep your shares, the $240, and any stock gains under $195.
AAPL closes above $195
Your shares get called away at $195. You're out of the stock, but you sold at a price you said you'd take — plus $240 of rent.
How the trade actually plays out, day by day
Your broker handles the mechanics automatically. You don't click anything on expiration day.
When this trade makes sense — and when it doesn’t
Covered calls aren’t right for every stock or every mood. Here’s the simple test:
Use it when…
- ✓You already own 100+ shares of the stock
- ✓You'd be fine selling at a higher price
- ✓You think the stock goes flat or slightly up
- ✓Options premium is rich (high IV rank)
Avoid it when…
- ✗You think the stock is about to rip higher
- ✗You're attached to the shares (tax, conviction)
- ✗Earnings are imminent and you're bullish
- ✗Premiums are unusually low (nothing to collect)
The payoff diagram — plain English
If you’ve seen covered call charts before, they look intimidating. Here’s the same picture with actual dollar outcomes labeled.
Your max gain is capped at $1,040 (the $8 stock move × 100 shares + $240 premium). Break-even sits at $184.60 — the stock can drop to there and you still come out flat.
Common questions
What happens if the stock gets called away?
Your broker sells your 100 shares at the strike price, automatically, on expiration day. Cash replaces the shares in your account. You didn’t lose money — you sold at a price you already said was fine — but you gave up any upside above the strike.
Can I close the trade early?
Yes. You can buy the call back any day before expiration. If the stock dropped and the call is now cheap, buying it back locks in most of the premium early. If the stock rallied and you want to keep the shares, you can buy the call back — usually for more than you sold it for.
How often can I do this?
Each contract is tied to a specific expiration. Once one ends (either expiring worthless or being closed), you can sell a new one against the same 100 shares. Many traders do this monthly, every 30–45 days.
Next in Generating Income
Poor man's covered call
The covered call income loop with less capital.
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