3 Option-Income ETFs to Buy Now for Monthly Cash Flow in 2026
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Quick Read
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JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPQ) holds $34.3B in assets with an 11% dividend yield and monthly distributions rising from $0.42728 in April 2024 to $0.5586 in April 2026, reflecting its institutional-scale covered call strategy on Nasdaq-100 names like NVIDIA, Apple, and Alphabet. YieldMax COIN Option Income Strategy ETF (CONY) generates 74% annualized distributions by writing weekly synthetic calls on Coinbase, though distributions ranged from $0.2219 to $0.6138 in 2026 and the fund’s NAV declined 11% over the past year. YieldMax Ultra Option Income Strategy ETF (ULTY) pays weekly income across a portfolio of 15-30 high-volatility stocks including quantum computing and crypto equities, offering 65% annualized distributions but with recent payouts consisting entirely of return-of-capital and only 3% since-inception returns from February 2024.
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All three funds execute the same covered call mechanism, collecting option premiums to fund distributions while capping upside during bull markets and accepting full downside losses, but they differ radically in complexity, stability, and income reliability across institutional mega-cap tech (JEPQ), single-stock crypto volatility (CONY), and rotating high-beta portfolios (ULTY).
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Option-income ETFs have carved out a distinct niche in the fund market by turning volatility into regular cash distributions. Three popular funds illustrate how wide the range of approaches and tradeoffs can be: a mega-cap tech covered call strategy with institutional scale, a single-stock crypto bet that pays out weekly, and a multi-name high-volatility portfolio designed to maximize distribution frequency, though often at the expense of yield predictability.
The Covered Call Mechanic Behind All Three
All three funds operate with the same basic engine: they sell call options against their equity holdings and pass the premiums collected to shareholders as distributions. When the fund sells a call, it receives cash upfront in exchange for capping the upside on the underlying stock if it rises sharply. That premium becomes the primary source of the fund’s income.
The structural tradeoff is important to understand: the fund gives up much of the upside potential in strong bull markets, while still bearing the full downside risk when the market falls. This asymmetry is the key lens through which any covered call strategy should be evaluated.
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JEPQ: Nasdaq-100 Exposure With a Systematic Income Overlay
JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (NYSEARCA:JEPQ) is the institutional-grade option in this group. The fund holds roughly $34.3 billion in net assets, making it one of the largest option-income ETFs in the market. Its strategy pairs a fundamentally managed equity portfolio of Nasdaq-100 names with a systematic overlay of written out-of-the-money Nasdaq-100 Index call options.
The portfolio reads like a concentrated large-cap tech fund. NVIDIA, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon collectively represent the top five positions, and information technology and communication services together account for about 25% of the portfolio. The options overlay writes calls at the index level rather than on individual stocks, which means the income stream is tied to broad Nasdaq-100 volatility rather than single-name moves.
JEPQ carries a 0.35% expense ratio and a dividend yield just above 11%. Monthly distributions have been consistent: the April 2026 distribution was $0.5586, compared to $0.42728 in April 2024, showing a meaningful step-up in income generation over two years. The fund’s adjusted price has risen roughly 31% over the past year, which reflects both the underlying Nasdaq-100 appreciation and the income reinvestment effect.
The tradeoff is upside-down limitation. During sharp Nasdaq rallies, the written calls cap JEPQ’s participation. Investors accepting that constraint in exchange for a monthly income near 12% are essentially trading some equity upside for a more predictable cash flow stream backed by some of the most liquid underlying names in the market.
CONY: Pure Coinbase Volatility Converted to Weekly Income
YieldMax COIN Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:CONY) takes a radically different approach. It does not hold Coinbase shares directly. Instead, it runs a synthetic covered call strategy using options on Coinbase Global, collecting weekly premiums and distributing them to shareholders. The fund launched in August 2023 and holds about $393 million in net assets.
The income case for CONY rests entirely on Coinbase’s implied volatility. Crypto-adjacent equities tend to carry some of the highest implied volatility readings in the market, which translates directly into larger option premiums. CONY’s annualized distribution rate stands near 74% as of mid-April 2026, though the 30-Day SEC Yield, which excludes option income, is just 2.76%, a reminder that the bulk of distributions comes from option premiums rather than traditional investment income.
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The distribution variability is real, as weekly payouts in 2026 have ranged from $0.2219 to $0.6138, depending on how Coinbase’s implied volatility shifted during each option cycle. The fund carries a 1.04% expense ratio, notably higher than JEPQ, reflecting the active management required to roll synthetic positions weekly.
CONY’s adjusted price has declined roughly 11% over the past year. That NAV erosion is the central tradeoff: when Coinbase falls, the fund absorbs those losses in full while the call premiums collected provide only a partial offset. Investors drawn to the headline distribution rate need to weigh it against the risk of ongoing share price deterioration in a down cycle for crypto equities.
ULTY: Maximum Distribution Frequency Across a High-Volatility Portfolio
YieldMax Ultra Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:ULTY) is the most complex structure of the three. Rather than focusing on a single stock or a broad index, ULTY runs covered call strategies across a portfolio of 15 to 30 U.S.-listed securities, each selected primarily based on implied volatility. The fund launched in February 2024 and holds roughly $872 million in net assets.
The holdings skew toward names with elevated volatility profiles. Current positions include quantum computing companies, AI-adjacent names, nuclear energy plays, and crypto-linked equities such as Coinbase and Strategy. The common thread is high implied volatility, which drives larger option premiums across sectors.
ULTY’s annualized distribution rate stands near 65% as of mid-April 2026. Distributions are paid weekly, with 2026 payouts ranging from roughly $0.37 to $0.50 per week. The fund’s adjusted price has risen about 20% over the past year, though its since-inception return from February 2024 is only around 3%, reflecting periods of significant distribution-driven NAV pressure in 2024 and mid-2025.
The most recent ULTY distribution, as of April 14, 2026, consisted entirely of a return of capital, with a 30-Day SEC Yield of 0%. Return of capital distributions does not represent investment income; they return a portion of the investor’s own principal, thereby reducing the fund’s cost basis over time. This does not make the fund unsuitable, but it does mean the headline distribution rate and the actual income earned by the fund can diverge materially in certain periods.
The multi-name structure spreads single-stock risk relative to CONY, but the underlying names are all high-beta, high-volatility equities. Diversification across volatile names is not the same as diversification into stable assets.
Choosing Between the Three
JEPQ provides exposure to the Nasdaq-100 while generating monthly income through a covered call strategy. It caps upside potential during strong rallies, but its institutional scale, low expense ratio, and reliable distribution history make it the most straightforward option of the three.
CONY’s income relies heavily on Coinbase remaining highly volatile. It offers weekly distributions, but investors must accept significant income swings and the risk of NAV erosion tied to crypto market cycles.
ULTY aims for the highest distribution frequency by writing calls on a rotating basket of high-volatility stocks. Because of its concentrated volatility exposure and the fact that recent distributions have included a large return-of-capital component, it stands out as the highest-complexity and highest-risk structure in the group.
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