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Options Strategies for Dividend Stocks: What Works?

When you own dividend stocks, options can help you either collect extra income or manage risk around payment dates. The most popular approach is selling covered calls—you sell call options against shares you already own, and keep the premium. If the stock stays below the strike, you pocket the premium and the dividend. If it gets called away above the strike, you've still made a profit on both the shares and the option. It's a classic income-stacking move.

Another angle is the cash-secured put, where you sell puts to generate premium while potentially buying the stock at a discount. This works well if you're comfortable owning more shares and want to lower your cost basis.

Timing matters because dividends complicate things. Right before an ex-dividend date, the stock typically drops by roughly the dividend amount. Some traders use that predictability to position spreads or collars. You could also structure a collar—buying a protective put and selling a call at a higher strike—to keep your dividend while capping upside and limiting downside.

The tricky part is that if you sell call options, your shares might be assigned away before you collect the dividend. Brokers have specific rules about dividend capture with options positions, so check yours.

The "best" strategy really depends on your goals. Are you trying to generate extra income on holdings you plan to keep long-term? Covered calls might suit you. Want to reduce your entry price if you're bullish? Cash-secured puts could work. Need to protect against a pullback while keeping dividends? A collar does that.

Start by mapping out your dividend schedule and risk tolerance, then use your site's calculator to compare how different strikes and expirations affect your returns. This is educational perspective only, not financial advice.

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Educational use only. Quotes are delayed ~15 minutes and nothing here is financial advice. Options trading involves substantial risk of loss. Privacy · Terms.