If you have spent any time in income-investing circles recently, you have almost certainly come across YieldMax funds the ETFs promising yields of 30%, 50%, or If you have spent any time in income-investing circles recently, you have almost certainly come across YieldMax funds the ETFs promising yields of 30%, 50%, or

YieldMax Funds Explained: How These ETFs Work, What They Pay & The Hidden Risks

2026/03/19 18:14
16 min read
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If you have spent any time in income-investing circles recently, you have almost certainly come across YieldMax funds the ETFs promising yields of 30%, 50%, or even triple digits. They sound extraordinary. And they are extraordinary but not always in the way that first-time buyers expect.

This guide breaks down exactly how YieldMax funds work, what
their distributions actually consist of, which funds are available, and
critically the hidden risks that do not appear in the headline yield figures.
Whether you are already holding one of these ETFs or simply evaluating them,
the information here will help you make a more informed decision.

What Are YieldMax Funds?

YieldMax funds are a family of actively managed,
income-focused exchange-traded funds (ETFs) launched in November 2022 through a
partnership between Tidal Investments LLC (adviser) and ZEGA Financial, LLC
(sub-adviser). The product line has since expanded to more than 60 individual
funds, making it one of the fastest-growing ETF families in recent years.

Unlike traditional ETFs that simply hold shares of companies,
YieldMax funds employ options-based strategies primarily a synthetic covered
call approach to generate income from well-known, highly volatile single
stocks and ETFs. Targets include companies such as Tesla, Nvidia, Apple,
Coinbase, MicroStrategy, and members of the so-called ‘Magnificent 7.’

Key
Fact

YieldMax funds do not directly own the underlying
stocks. Instead, they use synthetic positions created through options
contracts to gain price exposure while generating premium income.

How YieldMax Funds Work: The Mechanics Explained?

Understanding YieldMax funds requires a basic grasp of two
concepts: synthetic long positions and covered calls. Here is how each piece
fits together.

Step 1 – Creating a Synthetic Long Position

Rather than purchasing shares of, say, Tesla, a YieldMax fund
buys at-the-money (ATM) call options and simultaneously sells ATM put options
on the same underlying stock, both with the same expiration date (typically one
to three months out). This combination often called a synthetic long mimics
owning the stock for approximately zero net cost, because the premium received
from selling the put roughly offsets the cost of buying the call.

Step 2 – Selling Covered Call Options (The Income Engine)

On top of the synthetic long, the fund writes (sells)
short-dated, out-of-the-money call options on the same underlying security.
Buyers of these call options pay premiums upfront, and those premiums are the
primary source of the income distributed to shareholders. The fund generally
targets a strike price approximately 0% to 15% above the current stock price,
meaning the fund can participate in moderate upside but has its gains capped if
the stock rallies sharply.

Step 3 – U.S. Treasury Holdings as Collateral

Because the fund does not actually own the underlying stock,
it holds U.S. Treasury securities as a counterbalance. These Treasuries provide
collateral for the options positions and generate a modest amount of interest
income as well.

How
the Strategy Is Summarised?

Synthetic long position (call buy + put sell) =
exposure to the underlying stock.

Short call options written on that position = premium
income generated.

U.S. Treasury holdings = collateral and supplemental
interest income.

Result = a fund that can pay high distributions while
capping upside participation to roughly 0–15% per month.

Traditional Covered Call vs. YieldMax Synthetic Covered Call

Feature

Traditional Covered Call

YieldMax Synthetic Covered
Call

Owns Underlying Stock

Yes

No (synthetic position)

Income Source

Call option premiums

Call premiums + Treasury
interest

Upside Cap

Yes — strike price of call

Yes — generally ~0–15% per
month

Downside Exposure

Full (offset by owning
stock)

Full — no direct stock
ownership buffer

Receives Stock Dividends

Yes

No

Complexity

Moderate

Higher (derivatives-based)

Popular YieldMax Funds at a Glance

Below is a representative overview of several widely followed
YieldMax funds. Distribution rates shown are illustrative based on publicly
available data and may vary significantly from actual current figures. Always
check the fund’s official page for the most recent information.

Ticker

Full Name

Underlying Target

Est. Yield Range*

Expense Ratio

TSLY

YieldMax Tesla Option Income
Strategy ETF

Tesla (TSLA)

30–70%+

0.99%

NVDY

YieldMax NVDA Option Income
Strategy ETF

Nvidia (NVDA)

25–60%+

0.99%

MSTY

YieldMax MSTR Option Income
Strategy ETF

MicroStrategy (MSTR)

60–100%+

0.99%

CONY

YieldMax Coinbase Option
Income Strategy ETF

Coinbase (COIN)

40–80%+

0.99%

AMZY

YieldMax Amazon Option
Income Strategy ETF

Amazon (AMZN)

20–40%+

0.99%

GOOGY

YieldMax Google Option
Income Strategy ETF

Alphabet (GOOGL)

15–35%+

0.99%

YMAX

YieldMax Universe Fund of
Option Income ETFs

All YieldMax ETFs (fund of
funds)

50–80%+

1.28%

YMAG

YieldMax Magnificent 7 Fund
of Option Income ETFs

Mag-7 YieldMax ETFs (fund of
funds)

40–70%+

1.28%

*Yield ranges are approximate and historical. Distributions
are not guaranteed and can vary significantly month to month.

What Do YieldMax Funds Actually Pay And How Often?

YieldMax funds are designed to generate high income, but what investors actually receive and how often depends on their unique options-based strategy. Understanding their payout structure and frequency is key to evaluating whether these ETFs truly fit an income-focused portfolio.

Distribution Frequency

As of October 2025, the vast majority of YieldMax ETFs transitioned
to a weekly distribution schedule, making them among the most frequent-paying
ETFs available to U.S. investors. Distributions are generally declared every
Tuesday or Wednesday, with ex-dividend and record dates the following day, and
payment dates on Thursdays or Fridays. The exception is the YieldMax Target 12
ETFs, which continue on a monthly schedule.

What Makes Up a YieldMax Distribution?

This is arguably the most important thing to understand about
these funds. YieldMax distributions may consist of three components:

  • Option income (premiums earned from selling call options)
  • Capital gains (realized gains from options activity)
  • Return of Capital (ROC), the fund returning a portion of your own invested principal

Why
This Matters

Return of Capital is not income. When a fund pays ROC,
it is returning your own invested money not earnings. This gradually
reduces the fund’s NAV and your cost basis, which can result in higher
capital gains taxes when you eventually sell.

In some recent distributions, YieldMax funds have
reported ROC components of 90%+ or even 100%, meaning almost none of the
payout represents new income generated.

Distribution Rate vs. Total Return

The headline ‘distribution rate’ that YieldMax advertises is
calculated by annualizing the most recent distribution and dividing by the
fund’s current NAV. It is not the same as total return (which accounts for NAV
changes). Investors who focus solely on the distribution rate without tracking
NAV erosion may overestimate their actual gains.

The Hidden Risks of YieldMax Funds

YieldMax funds carry a distinctive and often underappreciated
risk profile. The following risks are the most critical to understand before
investing.

1. NAV Erosion

Every time a YieldMax fund distributes income, its NAV
typically drops by approximately the distribution amount on the ex-dividend
date. Over time, if the underlying stock declines and the fund cannot generate
sufficient option premiums to offset that decline, the NAV deteriorates.
Repeated distributions especially those with high ROC components — can
materially shrink the asset base over time. This is sometimes described as
‘getting your own money back while believing you earned a return.’

2. Capped Upside, Full Downside

Because the fund writes call options as part of its income
strategy, it limits participation in the underlying stock’s price appreciation
to approximately 0-15% per month. However, the fund retains full downside
exposure if the stock falls sharply. This asymmetric payoff profile means that
during strong bull markets, YieldMax funds can lag dramatically behind the
underlying stock they track. For example, while Tesla stock rose significantly
over a multi-year period, its related YieldMax ETF saw substantial NAV decline
over the same window.

3. Single-Stock Concentration Risk

Most individual YieldMax funds are tied to a single underlying
stock or ETF. If that company’s share price drops sharply due to earnings
misses, regulatory issues, or broader market downturns the fund’s NAV falls
in lockstep while income from option premiums may simultaneously decrease as
implied volatility normalises.

4. Income Variability

Option premiums and therefore distribution amounts are
primarily driven by implied volatility (IV) of the underlying stock. Higher
volatility generally produces higher premiums and larger distributions; lower
volatility results in smaller payouts. Distributions can therefore vary
significantly from period to period, and there is no guarantee that any
specific distribution amount will be maintained or paid at all.

5. Tax Complexity

Distributions classified as Return of Capital reduce your cost
basis in the fund. When you ultimately sell your shares, a lower cost basis
means a larger taxable gain potentially taxed at ordinary income rates rather
than long-term capital gains rates depending on how the fund reports the
income. Investors holding YieldMax funds in taxable accounts should consult a
tax professional to understand the implications of their specific situation.

6. Expense Ratios and Fund-of-Funds Fees

Individual YieldMax ETFs carry a 0.99% expense ratio. The
umbrella ‘fund of funds’ products (YMAX and YMAG) carry a 1.28% gross expense
ratio comprising a 0.29% management fee plus approximately 0.99% in acquired
fund fees and expenses from the underlying YieldMax holdings. This layered fee
structure creates additional drag on returns over time.

7. Derivatives and Counterparty Risk

Because these funds rely on options contracts rather than
direct stock ownership, they are exposed to derivatives-specific risks. These
include delta and gamma exposure (sensitivity to changes in the underlying
stock’s price), theta decay (the reduction in option value as expiration
approaches), and liquidity risk (wider bid-ask spreads in volatile markets).
There is also potential counterparty risk associated with over-the-counter
options contracts.

Important
Risk Summary

Capped upside: Participation in stock gains is
generally limited to 0-15% per month.

Full downside: There is no buffer if the underlying
stock declines sharply.

NAV erosion: Frequent distributions, especially those
with high ROC, reduce the fund’s asset value over time.

Income variability: Distributions fluctuate with
implied volatility and are never guaranteed.

Tax complexity: Return of Capital distributions reduce
cost basis, potentially creating deferred tax liabilities.

Layered fees: Fund-of-funds structures carry higher
effective expense ratios.

YieldMax Funds vs. Other Income ETF Strategies

YieldMax funds occupy a unique and higher-risk corner of the income ETF space within the broader capital market.  The table below compares them broadly against other popular income-oriented ETF approaches.

Feature

YieldMax Funds

JEPI / JEPQ (JPMorgan)

QYLD (Global X)

Dividend ETFs (e.g. VYM)

Bond ETFs

Typical Yield

20–100%+

7–12%

11–14%

2–4%

3–6%

Upside Participation

Capped (~0–15%/mo)

Partial

Capped (index-level)

Full

None

NAV Erosion Risk

High

Moderate

Moderate-High

Low

Low-Moderate

Single-Stock Risk

High (most funds)

Low (diversified)

Low (index-based)

Low

Low

ROC Component

Often Very High

Moderate

Moderate

Minimal

Minimal

Expense Ratio

0.99–1.28%

~0.35%

0.60%

0.06–0.35%

0.03–0.25%

Income Stability

Variable / Volatile

Relatively Stable

Moderate Stability

Stable

Stable

Note: All figures are approximate and for general comparison
purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Who Are YieldMax Funds Best Suited For?

Given their risk profile, YieldMax funds are generally not
considered appropriate for all investors. They may be best suited for:

  • Income-focused investors in or near retirement who prioritise current cash flow over long-term capital appreciation.
  • Investors who hold the funds within tax-advantaged accounts (such as IRAs or Roth IRAs), where the tax complexity of Return of Capital distributions is mitigated.
  • Investors who fully understand that headline yields do not represent total return and who actively track NAV performance alongside distributions.
  • Tactical income investors who use these funds as a smaller position within a diversified portfolio rather than as a core holding.

They are generally considered less suitable for:

  • Growth-oriented investors seeking capital appreciation alongside income.
  • Conservative or risk-averse investors, given the potential for significant NAV erosion.
  • Investors expecting stable, predictable income, since distributions can fluctuate materially from week to week.
  • Investors with short time horizons who may need to liquidate at an unfavourable NAV.

Tip
for Portfolio Sizing

Many financial professionals who discuss
options-income ETFs suggest treating high-yield single-stock strategies as a
tactical satellite position typically no more than 5-15% of a portfolio
rather than a core holding. This limits the potential impact of NAV erosion
on overall portfolio health.

How to Evaluate a YieldMax Fund Before Investing?

Before allocating capital to any YieldMax fund, consider
reviewing the following metrics and questions:

  1. Total Return vs. Distribution Rate: Check the fund’s total return (price change plus distributions), not just its distribution rate, over its entire operating history.
  2. NAV Trend: Is the fund’s NAV declining over time? A falling NAV combined with high distributions often signals that ROC is a significant component of the payout.
  3. ROC Percentage: Review the most recent 19a-1 notices or tax information available on the YieldMax website to understand what proportion of recent distributions constituted Return of Capital.
  4. Underlying Stock Volatility: Higher volatility generally produces higher option premiums — and thus higher potential distributions but also increases NAV risk.
  5. Expense Ratio: Account for the full cost of ownership, including acquired fund fees for fund-of-funds products like YMAX and YMAG.
  6. Account Type: Consider whether holding in a tax-advantaged account is more appropriate given the ROC implications.
  7. Fund Track Record: Given that many YieldMax funds launched in 2022 or later, they have limited history across full market cycles, including prolonged bear markets.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. Are YieldMax funds safe investments?

Ans. No investment is entirely ‘safe,’ and YieldMax funds carry a
notably elevated risk profile compared to traditional dividend ETFs or bond
funds. They are subject to NAV erosion, income variability, single-stock
concentration, and derivatives risk. They may be appropriate for informed,
risk-tolerant investors as part of a diversified portfolio, but generally
should not be considered low-risk or capital-preserving instruments.

2. Do YieldMax funds actually generate 50–100% yields?

Ans. The headline distribution rates are real in the sense that
funds do make those annualised payouts but a significant portion is typically
Return of Capital (your own invested money being returned, not new income). The
effective income yield the portion that represents genuinely earned returns
is generally considerably lower than the advertised distribution rate.

3. How are YieldMax distributions taxed?

Ans. YieldMax distributions may be classified as ordinary income,
capital gains, or Return of Capital, depending on the fund’s activity during
the relevant period. Return of Capital distributions are not immediately
taxable but reduce your cost basis. When you sell your shares, this lower basis
will result in a larger capital gain. Tax treatment can be complex, and
investors are encouraged to consult a qualified tax professional for guidance
specific to their situation.

4. Can I use DRIP (Dividend Reinvestment) with YieldMax funds?

Ans. Whether DRIP is available depends on your brokerage. Most
major platforms offer the option, but you should confirm with your specific
broker. Note that reinvesting distributions into a fund with a declining NAV
means you are purchasing shares at progressively lower prices — which can
either compound losses or mitigate them depending on the trajectory of the
underlying stock.

5. What happens to a YieldMax fund if the underlying stock crashes?

Ans. If the underlying stock experiences a sharp decline, the
fund’s NAV generally falls in proportion to that decline, as the synthetic long
position loses value. At the same time, implied volatility may spike (which
temporarily increases option premiums), but this is often insufficient to
offset a severe price drop. If the underlying stock subsequently recovers, the
fund may not recover at the same rate due to the capped upside of the covered
call strategy.

6. Are YieldMax funds good for retirement income?

Ans. This is a nuanced question. YieldMax funds can generate
substantial current income, which may appeal to retirees. However, the risk of
NAV erosion means that the long-term income stream may diminish over time if
the fund’s asset base shrinks. Retirees considering these funds should evaluate
them alongside more stable income sources and ideally hold them within
tax-advantaged accounts to manage the ROC tax complexity.

7. What is the difference between YMAX and YMAG?

Ans. Both are ‘fund of funds’ products that invest in a basket of
individual YieldMax ETFs. YMAX holds all YieldMax funds essentially single-stock and
ETF strategies and rebalances to equal weight monthly. YMAG specifically
targets the seven YieldMax funds tied to the Magnificent 7 technology stocks
(Tesla, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon). Both carry a
1.28% gross expense ratio and pay weekly distributions.

Key Takeaways

1

YieldMax funds use a synthetic covered call strategy — not
direct stock ownership — to generate income from option premiums on popular,
high-volatility stocks.

2

Headline distribution rates are often 30–100%+ but
frequently include a large Return of Capital component — meaning the fund may
be returning your own money, not generating new earnings.

3

NAV erosion is a significant and ongoing risk. As
distributions are paid out — particularly those with high ROC components —
the fund’s net asset value tends to decline over time.

4

The funds offer capped upside (approximately 0–15% per
month) but full downside exposure to the underlying stock’s price movements,
creating an asymmetric risk profile.

5

YieldMax funds may be appropriate for income-focused,
risk-tolerant investors — ideally in tax-advantaged accounts — as a tactical
allocation, not a core portfolio holding.

6

Always evaluate total return — not just the headline
distribution rate — and review the fund’s NAV trend, ROC composition, and
expense ratio before investing.

Conclusion

YieldMax funds have carved out a genuinely novel niche in the
ETF landscape. For the right investor, they can provide meaningful cash flow
from an otherwise low-yielding market environment. However, the headline yield
numbers require careful interpretation. A 60% distribution rate does not mean
60% earned income it frequently means a significant portion is Return of
Capital, and it comes with a real risk of shrinking NAV over time.

The synthetic covered call approach is a sophisticated
strategy that professionals have used for decades to monetise volatility.
Wrapping it in an ETF format makes it accessible but accessibility does not
reduce the complexity of the risk. Before investing in any YieldMax fund, take
the time to understand the mechanics, scrutinise the total return history, and
honestly assess whether current income is more important to your financial plan
than long-term capital growth.

As with any investment, consulting a qualified financial
adviser who understands your full financial picture is always a sound step.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

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