Covered Call Calculator
Use this free covered call calculator to model your income trade before you place it. Enter your stock cost, strike price, and premium received to instantly see max profit, breakeven, downside protection, and a full P&L diagram.
How to use the covered call calculator
Enter your stock cost basis, strike price, and premium received above and the calculator updates in real time. Here is what each input does.
Enter your stock cost basis
Enter the price you paid per share for the stock you own. This sets your breakeven and is used to calculate your downside protection percentage.
Enter the call strike price
Enter the strike price of the call you are selling. If the stock closes above this price at expiration, your shares get called away at this price.
Enter the premium received
Enter the premium collected per share for selling the call. The calculator multiplies this by 100 to show your total income and adjusts your breakeven accordingly.
Review your results
See your max profit, breakeven price, and downside protection instantly. The P&L diagram shows how the combined stock-plus-short-call position performs at expiration.
Understanding the covered call strategy
A covered call is one of the most widely used options strategies because it is simple, conservative, and generates income on stock you already hold. You sell a call option against 100 shares of stock in your account, collecting a premium upfront. In return, you agree to sell those shares at the strike price if the option is exercised at expiration. If the stock stays below the strike, the option expires worthless and you keep the full premium. You can then sell another call for the next cycle.
The premium you collect immediately lowers your cost basis and creates a small buffer against a price decline. This is what the calculator labels as downside protection. If you bought stock at $50 and collected $1.50 in premium, your effective cost basis drops to $48.50. You do not start losing money on the full position until the stock falls below that level.
The trade-off: capped upside
The cost of selling a covered call is that your profit is capped at the strike price. If the stock jumps well above your strike before expiration, your shares get called away at the strike and you miss out on gains above that level. This is why strike selection matters. Selling a call too close to the current stock price collects more premium but caps your upside tightly. Selling a further out-of-the-money call gives the stock more room to run but brings in less income.
When to use a covered call
Covered calls work best when you own a stock, are neutral to modestly bullish on it over the near term, and want to generate consistent monthly income. They are especially popular among long-term investors who are comfortable selling their shares at the strike price if the stock rallies. If you are strongly bullish and do not want to cap your upside, it may be better to hold the stock without selling a call.
Covered call example with real numbers
Here is a worked example you can enter directly into the calculator above to see the full P&L diagram in action.
Trade setup: XYZ stock owned at $50.00
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Covered call calculator FAQ
Common questions about the covered call strategy and how to use this calculator.
A covered call is a strategy where you own at least 100 shares of a stock and sell a call option against that position. You collect a premium upfront in exchange for agreeing to sell your shares at the strike price if the option is exercised at expiration. It is called covered because your stock holding covers the obligation on the short call. The strategy generates consistent income but caps your upside at the strike price.
The maximum profit is the call strike price minus your stock cost basis, plus the premium received, times 100 shares per contract. Using the example above: ($55 strike – $50 cost + $1.50 premium) x 100 = $650. You achieve max profit when the stock closes at or above the strike at expiration. Any stock gain beyond the strike does not benefit you because your shares get called away at the strike price.
The breakeven price on a covered call is your stock cost basis minus the premium received per share. For example, if you bought stock at $50 and collected $1.50 in premium, your breakeven is $48.50. The premium effectively lowers your cost basis and provides a small buffer against a price decline. Below $48.50, the position begins running at a loss even after accounting for the premium collected.
Downside protection shows how much the stock can decline before the overall covered call position starts losing money. It equals the premium received divided by your stock cost basis, expressed as a percentage. If you paid $50 for a stock and collected $1.50 in premium, you have 3% downside protection. The stock can fall from $50 to $48.50 without the position being in the red at expiration. Beyond that, the loss in stock value exceeds the premium buffer.
If the stock closes above your call strike price at expiration, your 100 shares will be called away and sold at the strike price. You keep the premium collected and you receive the strike price per share for your stock. Your total profit is capped at the maximum profit figure shown in the calculator. The downside is that you miss any gains the stock made above the strike price. If you want to keep your shares, you can buy back the call before expiration, though it will cost more if the stock is above the strike.
This calculator is for educational and informational purposes only. Options trading involves substantial risk and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always consult a licensed financial professional before making investment decisions.
