What Does “Rolling” a Covered Call Mean?

Rolling is one of the most useful tools in covered call trading. It simply means closing your current short call and immediately selling a new one — usually at a higher strike price, further expiration date, or both. Think of it as extending or upgrading the trade so you can keep collecting premium and give your stock more room to grow.

Why We Roll (Tastytrade Style)

We don’t just hold until expiration. We actively manage, especially on shorter-dated options ( 30-60 days)

  • Collect additional premium

  • Move the strike higher (giving the stock more upside room)

  • Keep generating income instead of having shares called away too early

Key Rolling Guidelines (for a call originally sold around 10–16 Delta):

  • It is always preferred to take profits early at 50% of the premium collected (close the call and keep the profit).

  • If the stock rises and your short call’s delta reaches 20–30, consider rolling up and out for a net credit.

  • Always try to roll for a net credit (you receive more premium on the new call than it costs to close the old one).

Simple Example:

You sold a 10-delta covered call and collected $1.00 premium.
The stock rises, and your short call’s delta is now 25–30. You roll it:

  • Buy back the original call

  • Sell a new, higher-strike call with more days to expiration

Result: You collect extra credit, move the strike higher, and continue the income stream — all while staying in a stock you like.

Summary of Simple Rolling Rules

  1. Take 50% profit on the short call whenever possible.

  2. If delta climbs to the 20–30 range, look to roll up and out for credit.

  3. Only roll if it makes financial sense (net credit preferred).

  4. Never chase — if you can’t roll for credit, you can simply let it expire or get called away.

Rolling is what turns covered calls from a one-time trade into a repeatable income machine. It gives you flexibility and control without forcing you to sell your favorite stocks.