Quick answer: As of July 13, 2026, OptionsPlay highlights the Aug 28, 2026 $480.00 TSLA covered call — $507.50 premium income, 1.30% static yield, 10.81% annualized yield, and a 89.59% probability of keeping the income. This page helps investors compare TSLA covered call income, risk/reward, and stock context before entering a trade.
Today's Best TSLA Covered Call
A covered call income idea for TSLA shareholders
Simple read: Selling the Aug 28, 2026 $480.00 covered call on your TSLA position would generate $507.50 of income, providing a static yield of 1.30% in 46 days (10.81% annualized).
You will keep $507.50 of income per contract if TSLA closes below $480.00 on Aug 28, 2026. There is a 89.59% probability that this will happen.
TSLA Market Snapshot & Strategy Metrics
Key stock data and covered call strategy metrics for Tesla (TSLA) as of July 13, 2026.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| 52W Range | $297.82 - $498.83 |
| EPS | $1.08 |
| P/E | 372.52 |
| Div / Yield | $0.00 / 0.00% |
| Liquidity | Very Liquid |
| IV Rank | 33 / 100 |
| Earnings | |
| 1M Outlook | Bearish |
| 6M Outlook | Bearish |
| Relative Strength | 3 / 10 |
| Volume | 29.18M |
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Premium Income / Net Credit | -$507.50 |
| Max Reward | $9,021.50 |
| Max Risk | $38,978.50 |
| Annualized / Raw Return | 10.81%*/1.30% |
| 12M Projected Yield | 10.81%* |
| Probability of Winning (POW) | 89.59% |
| Breakeven | $389.79 |
| Days to Expiry | 46 |
TSLA Covered Call Payoff
A simple payoff view helps traders understand the income received, the breakeven level, and where upside becomes capped.
This is a bullish strategy with limited risk of $38,978.50 and limited potential reward of $9,021.50.
How OptionsPlay Screens TSLA Covered Calls
This methodology explains why a covered call appears on the page, not just what the yield is — combining income, strike selection, probability, liquidity, volatility context, and portfolio fit.
Premium and annualized yield
We compare premium income, static yield, and annualized yield so investors can evaluate income relative to the cost of holding TSLA shares.
Upside before assignment
We look at the distance between TSLA's current price and the selected strike to understand how much room the stock has before assignment risk increases.
Likelihood of expiring below strike
Probability of winning helps frame how likely the call is to expire out of the money, while still requiring users to consider stock downside risk.
Bid/ask quality and tradability
Covered call opportunities are easier to evaluate when the option market is liquid and bid/ask spreads are not excessively wide.
IV Rank and event risk
High yields can come from elevated implied volatility. We show IV Rank and earnings timing to help users separate opportunity from event-driven risk.
Risk, breakeven, and capped upside
We surface max risk, max reward, and breakeven so investors can decide whether the trade fits their TSLA outlook and income objective.
Learn How Covered Calls Work
Internal links give users and search engines a clearer path from ticker-specific data to evergreen options education.
The Beginner's Guide to Covered Calls
Learn what a covered call is, why investors sell calls against stock they own, and how premium income works.
Read the covered call guide →Covered Call Strategy & Strike Selection
Review how out-of-the-money strikes, delta, probability, and expiration choice can affect income and assignment risk.
Finding High-Yield Covered Calls
See how OptionsPlay's covered call report helps compare raw return, annualized return, IV Rank, distance to strike, and liquidity.
More Covered Call Ideas Today
Beyond TSLA, here are other covered call opportunities from today's OptionsPlay daily report — ranked by income potential and quality filters.
| Symbol | Last Price |
D-Edge | Strike | Expiry | Bid | Mid | IV Rank |
Raw Return |
Annualized Return |
Dist. to Strike |
Earn. Date |
Time | Earnings Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NUAI | $4.12 | Deteriorating | $6.50 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.30 | $0.47 | 49% | 11.53% | 91.48% | 57.77% | 08/14/2026 | AMC | Yes |
| NEHC | $4.12 | Deteriorating | $6.50 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.30 | $0.47 | N/A | 11.53% | 91.48% | 57.77% | 08/14/2026 | AMC | Yes |
| SOXS | $4.65 | Strong Bear | $8.50 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.46 | $0.53 | 72% | 11.40% | 90.44% | 82.8% | — | — | No |
| LABX | $115.96 | Strong Bull | $270.00 | 08/21/2026 (39d) | $9.00 | $10.95 | 73% | 9.44% | 88.38% | 132.84% | — | — | No |
| METU | $26.99 | Rally | $30.00 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $2.40 | $2.90 | 100% | 10.74% | 85.26% | 11.15% | — | — | No |
| NN | $15.44 | Strong Bear | $25.00 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.45 | $1.60 | 70% | 10.36% | 82.23% | 61.92% | 08/05/2026 | AMC | Yes |
| RXT | $4.51 | Pullback | $7.00 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.25 | $0.45 | 45% | 9.98% | 79.15% | 55.18% | 08/06/2026 | BMO | Yes |
| KEEL | $4.36 | Pullback | $5.50 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $0.34 | $0.40 | 21% | 9.29% | 73.71% | 26.15% | 08/10/2026 | BMO | Yes |
| AMDL | $68.21 | Strong Bull | $105.00 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $4.80 | $6.19 | 89% | 9.09% | 72.12% | 53.94% | — | — | No |
| KORU | $419.19 | Pullback | $850.00 | 08/28/2026 (46d) | $33.00 | $38.00 | 76% | 9.07% | 71.93% | 102.77% | — | — | No |
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What is a covered call?
A covered call is an options income strategy where for every 100 shares of a stock or ETF that you own, you can sell a call option against those shares. You receive income upfront. If the stock stays below the strike price through expiration, the call expires worthless and you keep the income. If it rises above the strike, you may be required to sell your shares at that strike price.
When looking for trade ideas, you can use our option screener for covered calls with a high probability of profit and annualized return, as well as steady dividends and robust fundamentals.
How do covered calls generate income?
Covered calls generate income because you receive a premium upfront when you sell a call option against shares you already own. That income provides additional return on a stock position, especially if the stock trades sideways, rises modestly, or remains below the strike price through expiration. Income potential depends on stock price, strike, expiration date, implied volatility, and options liquidity.
What is a covered call on TSLA?
A covered call on TSLA means you own at least 100 shares of Tesla and sell one call option against those shares. The example here — the Aug 21, 2026 $480.00 call — collects $490.00 premium (1.26% yield, 90.22% probability). You keep the premium if TSLA closes below $480.00 at expiration. If TSLA rises above $480.00, your shares may be called away at that price.
What should I look for besides income?
Look beyond income alone. Important factors include the stock's trend, expiration date, strike price, the option's bid/ask spread, probability of assignment, upcoming earnings or dividends, and whether the income is worth the capped upside. OptionsPlay uses annualized yield, IV Rank, and Options Liquidity Rank to help evaluate quality opportunities.
What are the best stocks for covered calls?
The best stocks for covered calls are typically ones you are comfortable owning, with liquid options and enough income potential to justify the strategy. Look for stocks with stable or moderately bullish outlooks, active options markets, reasonable bid/ask spreads, and no major event risk before expiration. OptionsPlay's Highest Yielding Covered Call Report automates this process.
How can I find high-yielding covered call opportunities?
Screen for stocks and ETFs with liquid options and expirations and strike prices that fit your objective. A strong process should help you filter for income while evaluating risk, liquidity, earnings timing, and whether the strategy fits your outlook. OptionsPlay's Highest Yielding Covered Call Report ranks candidates by income potential and quality filters.
How often should you sell covered calls?
The right frequency depends on your objective, risk tolerance, transaction costs, and willingness to manage the position. Weekly covered calls provide more frequent income but require more active management. Monthly covered calls may offer a more balanced approach. OptionsPlay generally favors expirations in the 30–45 day range for an attractive balance of income and manageability.
How do I choose the best expiration and strike price?
OptionsPlay's research and backtesting shows covered calls in the 30–45 day-to-expiration range have historically provided an attractive balance of income, time decay, and manageability. For strike selection, OptionsPlay generally favors selling calls farther out of the money, around the 10–15 delta range, when the goal is to prioritize stock appreciation while still generating income.
What is the max profit and risk on this TSLA covered call?
The maximum reward on the Aug 21, 2026 $480.00 TSLA covered call is $9,136.00. The maximum risk is $38,864.00 — the cost of holding the shares minus the premium received. The breakeven is $388.64. Below this price at expiration, the position results in a net loss after accounting for the $490.00 premium received.
What are the risks associated with a covered call?
A covered call does not add additional risk to your portfolio beyond owning the stock. Your primary downside risk is the stock declining — the premium received reduces that risk by lowering your breakeven. The main tradeoff is capped upside: if TSLA rises above $480.00, your shares may be called away, limiting your gains on the stock position.
When should you roll a covered call?
Consider rolling when the stock has moved closer to or above the strike price, when assignment risk has increased, or when you want to extend the trade. Rolling involves buying back the existing call and selling another with a later expiration, a different strike, or both. OptionsPlay's Portfolio tool can help you track when it may be time to roll or adjust a position.
Should I sell covered calls before earnings?
Selling covered calls before earnings can generate higher income because implied volatility often rises ahead of major announcements. However, TSLA has earnings on Jul 22, 2026, and earnings can cause large price gaps. If TSLA falls sharply, the income may not provide enough protection. If it rises sharply, your upside is capped. Evaluate carefully before entering a covered call ahead of earnings.