The Weekly vs. Monthly Debate Is Costing You Money
I get this question at least five times a week from new students: “Mark, should I sell weekly or monthly covered calls?” And I get why they’re asking — it seems like the kind of decision that could make or break your income strategy. But after 40+ years of selling premium, here’s what I’ve learned: the answer isn’t which one is “better.” It’s which one fits your temperament, your portfolio size, and your income goals.
Most people pick a side, argue about it on forums, and completely miss the point. The real question is: which cadence will you actually execute consistently, month after month, year after year? Because in covered call income investing, consistency is the entire game.
Let me break down the hard numbers, the hidden trade-offs, and the system I teach my 1,400+ students so you can make the right choice for your situation.
The Core Difference: Time Decay Works Differently
Before we compare income numbers, you need to understand one critical concept: time decay (theta) is not linear. An option doesn’t lose value at the same rate each day. Instead, it accelerates — losing value faster and faster as expiration approaches.
This is why covered call sellers love short-dated options. A call with 30 days to expiration loses value slowly in week one. But in the final week? That same option’s time value melts like ice cream in July. For us as sellers, that melting value is money in our pockets.
Here’s the practical impact:
- Weekly call (7 DTE, $103 strike on a $100 stock): Collect approximately $0.50 per share
- Monthly call (30 DTE, $104 strike on the same stock): Collect approximately $2.00 per share
Over 30 days, selling four weekly calls might net you $2.00 total ($0.50 x 4 weeks), while the single monthly call also nets $2.00. The gross premium is remarkably similar. The differences lie in everything around the premium — management effort, assignment risk, transaction costs, and decision fatigue.
Weekly Covered Calls: The Numbers and the Reality
Let’s run through a concrete educational example. Say you own 100 shares of a quality stock trading at $200 per share — a $20,000 position.
| Element | Weekly Approach |
|---|---|
| Strike Price | $206 (3% OTM) |
| Premium per Week | ~$1.20/share = $120 |
| Annual Gross Premium | $120 x 52 = $6,240 |
| Annualized Yield | ~31% |
| Decisions per Year | 52 |
| Estimated Assignments | 8-12 per year |
Those numbers look attractive. But here’s what the spreadsheet doesn’t show you:
- 52 decision points per year — every single one is an opportunity to deviate from your system, chase a different strike, or panic during a volatile week.
- Wider bid-ask spreads — weekly options have significantly less open interest than monthlies. That means you give back more on each trade in slippage.
- More frequent assignment friction — getting called away 8-12 times per year means 8-12 times you need to re-enter positions, potentially at worse prices.
- Tax complexity compounds — each assignment creates a taxable event. Weekly sellers face far more paperwork and short-term capital gains. If you want to understand the full tax picture, my covered call tax treatment guide lays it all out.
Monthly Covered Calls: The Case for Simplicity
Now the same $20,000 position, monthly approach:
| Element | Monthly Approach |
|---|---|
| Strike Price | $210 (5% OTM) |
| Premium per Month | ~$4.50/share = $450 |
| Annual Gross Premium | $450 x 12 = $5,400 |
| Annualized Yield | ~27% |
| Decisions per Year | 12 |
| Estimated Assignments | 3-4 per year |
The gross yield is slightly lower — roughly 4 percentage points. But look at what you gain:
- 12 decisions instead of 52 — that’s 40 fewer opportunities to make a mistake. Decision fatigue is real, and it compounds over a 12-month period.
- Tighter bid-ask spreads — monthly options carry significantly more open interest and liquidity. You capture more of the quoted premium on each trade.
- Larger downside buffer — collecting $4.50 upfront gives you a 2.25% cushion. If the stock drops 2% during the month, you’re still net positive. Weekly premiums offer a much thinner buffer per trade.
- Fewer assignments — with a 5% OTM strike over 30 days, the stock has to rally meaningfully to trigger assignment. That keeps you in your positions longer. For a refresher on handling assignment, read my covered call assignment guide.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Factor | Weekly | Monthly | Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Annual Yield | ~31% | ~27% | Weekly (by ~4%) |
| Net Yield (After Costs) | ~25-27% | ~25-26% | Comparable |
| Management Effort | 52 trades/year | 12 trades/year | Monthly |
| Assignment Frequency | 8-12/year | 3-4/year | Monthly |
| Decision Fatigue | High | Low | Monthly |
| Downside Buffer per Trade | Smaller | Larger | Monthly |
| Liquidity / Spreads | Wider spreads | Tighter spreads | Monthly |
| Flexibility to Adjust | More frequent | Less frequent | Weekly |
| Tax Complexity | Higher | Lower | Monthly |
Notice something? Monthly wins on nearly every practical metric except raw gross yield. And once you factor in bid-ask spread costs, commissions, and the inevitable mistakes from managing 52 trades per year, that gross yield advantage largely disappears.
What I Actually Teach: The 2-to-6-Week Sweet Spot
In my Cash Flow Machine system, I don’t tell students to pick weekly or monthly and stick with it forever. Instead, I teach three strategies — Fortress, Balance Point, and Rocket — and all three are income strategies, not capital gains strategies. The expiration window I recommend is typically 2 to 6 weeks out, which captures the best of both worlds:
- Enough time decay acceleration to generate meaningful premium
- Few enough trades to manage in roughly 20 minutes per week
- Sufficient liquidity to enter and exit without giving up too much to the bid-ask spread
- Built-in flexibility to roll positions when the market moves against you
The Balance Point strategy, for instance, is designed to bring in the most income — what I call “the Juice” — while the Fortress strategy prioritizes downside protection. The Rocket gives you more upside potential. The expiration you choose should align with which strategy fits your current market outlook.
Risk Management: Where Expiration Choice Really Matters
Your expiration selection directly impacts your risk management in three critical ways:
- Gamma risk is higher with weeklies. Gamma measures how fast delta changes. When you’re selling a weekly call and the stock makes a 3% move on Thursday, that option’s value can swing dramatically. Monthly calls absorb these moves more gracefully because there’s more time left for the position to recover.
- Rolling options is easier with monthlies. If your stock moves against you, rolling a monthly call (buying back the current call and selling one further out) gives you more premium to work with. Weekly rolls often yield very little net credit because there’s so little time value left.
- Earnings risk management. If a stock reports earnings in two weeks, a monthly call lets you collect premium that spans the entire period. A weekly call forces you to decide whether to hold through the announcement or sit out — and sitting out means missing income. For a deep dive on this, see my covered calls before earnings guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do weekly covered calls really make more money than monthly?
On a gross premium basis, weekly covered calls can generate slightly higher annualized yields — typically 2-4% more. However, once you factor in wider bid-ask spreads, more frequent transaction costs, and the inevitable management errors from making 52 decisions per year instead of 12, the net returns are remarkably similar. For most individual investors, monthly or bi-weekly options are the more reliable income generators.
How much time do I need to manage weekly vs. monthly covered calls?
Weekly covered calls require attention every week — checking positions, rolling or closing on Fridays, re-entering new positions. Plan on 30-60 minutes per week per position. Monthly covered calls need attention roughly twice a month — once to enter and once near expiration to manage. Most of my students spend about 20 minutes per week total managing a portfolio of monthly positions across multiple stocks.
Can I mix weekly and monthly covered calls in the same portfolio?
Absolutely, and many experienced income investors do exactly that. A common approach is to sell monthly calls on your core positions (stable, buy-and-hold stocks) and use weekly calls on higher-volatility names where you want to capture elevated premiums during specific windows. This gives you steady base income from monthlies while capturing volatility spikes with weeklies. The key is managing your total position count so you don’t overwhelm yourself.
What expiration do most professional covered call sellers use?
The institutional standard — reflected in benchmarks like the Cboe BuyWrite Index (BXM) — uses monthly expirations. Most professionals and serious individual investors gravitate toward 2-6 week expirations, which balances premium collection with manageable risk and effort. This is the same window I teach in my options income strategies framework.
Find Your Rhythm and Collect Income Consistently
Here’s the honest truth after four decades of selling premium: the best covered call strategy is the one you will actually execute consistently. If managing 52 weekly trades per year sounds energizing, go weekly. If it sounds exhausting, go monthly. If you’re somewhere in between, the 2-to-6-week window that I teach in the Cash Flow Machine system gives you the flexibility to adapt without drowning in management overhead.
The income is in the consistency, not the cadence.
If you’re ready to see exactly how I structure covered call positions for maximum income with minimum stress, watch my free MasterCourse. It’s a 50-minute training that walks you through the complete Cash Flow Machine framework — the same system my 1,400+ students use to target 2-4% monthly income in about 20 minutes per week.
For more strategies and live trade breakdowns, visit the Cash Flow Machine YouTube channel or explore the covered calls resource center.
The information in this article is for education and information purposes only. This is not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All examples are hypothetical and for educational illustration only. Consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decisions.