QYLD Review: The 12% Yield That Eats Your Principal
Intermediate · 7 min read · Updated April 2026
QYLD pays a headline ~12% distribution yield by selling at-the-money monthly covered calls on the entire Nasdaq-100 and handing 100% of the premium back to shareholders. What the marketing doesn't say: the structure guarantees NAV erosion in rising or volatile markets. This review explains the mechanics, the data, and when (if ever) QYLD makes sense.
The one-line pitch (with caveat)
QYLD sells at-the-money covered calls on the entire Nasdaq-100 every month and distributes all the premium. You get ~12% annual yield paid monthly. You give up nearly all upside when the Nasdaq rallies.
The key stats
Inception: December 2013
Expense ratio: 0.60% (high for passive)
Distribution: Monthly, capped at ~1% of NAV
Yield (TTM): ~11-13%
AUM: ~$8B
The mechanics
QYLD is mechanical. Every month:
- Hold all 100 Nasdaq-100 stocks in index weights.
- Sell at-the-money call options on the Nasdaq-100 index covering 100% of the portfolio.
- Collect the premium.
- Distribute all the premium to shareholders, capped at 1% of NAV per month.
- Roll next month. Repeat.
No manager discretion, no OTM versatility. The fund gives up every dollar of Nasdaq upside above the strike — which is always at-the-money, so essentially all the upside.
The NAV erosion problem
Look at the price history:
Current (2026): ~$16-17/share
~30-35% NAV decline over 12+ years
Nasdaq-100 over same period: ~5x the starting value
QYLD total return: ~6-7% annualized
QQQ total return: ~17% annualized
Total return is positive because distributions are large. But the structural gap vs plain QQQ is roughly 10 percentage points per year — enormous compounding drag.
Return of capital — the tax trick
A portion of QYLD’s distributions gets classified as return of capital (ROC). ROC isn’t taxed immediately — it lowers your cost basis and is taxed as capital gains when you eventually sell. Short-term it feels like tax-efficient income. Long-term it means the fund is literally handing your principal back while reducing your recoverable basis.
Who might actually want QYLD
Narrow but legitimate use cases:
- Retirees needing monthly cash flow who will spend the distributions and don’t care about NAV growth.
- Bond substitutes in tax-advantaged accounts, accepting that declining NAV is the cost of yield.
- Small sleeve allocations (5-10%) for yield, paired with growth holdings.
- Someone who would otherwise hold cash and accepts the NAV decay in exchange for the monthly check.
Who shouldn’t touch it
Use it when…
- ✓You're retired, spending distributions, don't care about NAV
- ✓You hold a small position in a tax-advantaged account
- ✓You're using it as a bond alternative with eyes open
- ✓You understand ROC and are comfortable with declining basis
Avoid it when…
- ✗You have a 10+ year horizon (compounding is broken)
- ✗You plan to reinvest distributions (worst tax-adjusted math)
- ✗You're in a high tax bracket with a taxable account
- ✗You haven't read the total return data vs QQQ
QYLD vs JEPQ
JEPQ is the newer, structurally better competitor for the same goal:
| Feature | QYLD | JEPQ |
|---|---|---|
| Call strategy | ATM on 100% | OTM via ELNs on ~15-20% |
| Upside capture | Near zero above strike | Meaningful retained upside |
| Yield | ~11-12% | ~9-10% |
| Expense ratio | 0.60% | 0.35% |
| NAV since inception | Down ~30%+ | Roughly flat |
JEPQ delivers ~80-90% of the yield with dramatically better NAV preservation, half the fee, and partial upside participation. For almost every investor, it’s the better choice.
Common questions
Is QYLD a wealth destroyer?
For long-horizon investors, functionally yes. The ATM covered-call structure gives up nearly all Nasdaq upside while absorbing nearly all downside. NAV has trended down since 2013 inception. For short-horizon retirees spending the distributions, it can still serve a purpose.
Is QYLD's 12% yield real income?
Partially. It’s real premium from selling calls, but a meaningful portion is classified as return of capital (ROC) — meaning the fund is returning your own principal while the cost basis adjusts down.
QYLD vs JEPQ — which is better?
JEPQ is the better-designed product for almost everyone. It delivers ~80-90% of QYLD’s yield with materially better NAV preservation, half the expense ratio, and more upside participation.
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