<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"><channel><title>Options_premium_selling on LibreLeo: Financial Freedom for Globally Mobile Investors</title><link>https://libreleo.com/tags/options_premium_selling/</link><description>Tools, math, and lived experience for expats building wealth across borders. Passive portfolios and active income from a Dubai-based trader.</description><generator>Hugo -- gohugo.io</generator><language>en</language><copyright>Copyright © 2026 | All rights reserved</copyright><lastBuildDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://libreleo.com/tags/options_premium_selling/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Selling Option Premiums - A Beginner's Guide to Active Income</title><link>https://libreleo.com/passive_active_investments/options_trading/selling-option-premiums-active-income-beginners-guide/</link><pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://libreleo.com/passive_active_investments/options_trading/selling-option-premiums-active-income-beginners-guide/</guid><description>Selling option premiums is one of the most reliable ways to pull income out of a stock portfolio, but it is active income, not passive. Here is what it actually is, how it works, and the risks you need to manage.</description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<span class="flex cursor-pointer">
  
  
  
  
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Updated: 18/06/2026

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<div class="lead text-neutral-500 dark:text-neutral-400 !mb-9 text-xl">
  Most articles you'll read about selling option premiums call it &quot;passive income.&quot; It isn't. It's one of the most reliable ways to generate cash flow from a stock portfolio I've ever found. But it is active income, and pretending otherwise is the fastest way to lose money doing it.
</div>

<p>After several years of selling premium on real capital, here's what I've learned: it pays consistently and compounds nicely. This article is the entry point of my Options Trading series: what option premiums are, why selling them is active income, and how the two core strategies (cash-secured puts and covered calls) actually work.</p>

<h2 class="relative group">Active income vs. passive income - get the framing right
    <div id="active-income-vs-passive-income---get-the-framing-right" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#active-income-vs-passive-income---get-the-framing-right" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h2>
<p>Passive income is rent from a property, dividends from an index fund, interest from a bond. You make a decision once and the cash arrives while you sleep. Selling option premium is not that.</p>
<p>Every premium I collect comes from a decision: which ticker, which strike, which expiration, which size. Every position needs monitoring. Some need to be managed, like rolled, closed early, or defended.</p>
<p>That's why I've come to think of my portfolio in two lanes:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Passive lane</strong> - Index funds, dividend stocks, etc. Set the allocation, rebalance occasionally, otherwise leave it alone.</li>
<li><strong>Active lane</strong> - Options premium selling, layered on top of the cash and stock I already own. It generates an additional income stream, but I work for it.</li>
</ul>
<p>Both lanes belong in a serious financial-freedom plan.</p>

<h2 class="relative group">What is an option premium?
    <div id="what-is-an-option-premium" class="anchor"></div>
    
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        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#what-is-an-option-premium" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h2>
<p>An option premium is the fee a buyer pays a seller for a specific right tied to a stock - without any obligation to actually use that right.</p>
<p>There are two contract types you need to know:</p>
<ol>
<li><div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>Call options</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div>: give the buyer the <em>right</em> to <div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>buy</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div> a stock at a specific price (the strike) before a specific date (the expiration).</li>
<li><div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>Put options</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div>: give the buyer the <em>right</em> to <div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>sell</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div> a stock at a specific price before expiration.</li>
</ol>
<p>When you <strong>sell</strong> a contract, the buyer pays you an upfront fee. That fee is the <strong>premium</strong>. You keep it regardless of what the stock does, even if the buyer never exercises.</p>

<h2 class="relative group">The two core strategies for active income
    <div id="the-two-core-strategies-for-active-income" class="anchor"></div>
    
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        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#the-two-core-strategies-for-active-income" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h2>
<p>As a seller, what the industry calls a &quot;writer&quot;, you're effectively underwriting insurance. Buyers pay you to take on a defined risk. Done right, the math is in your favor: most options expire worthless, and the seller keeps the premium.</p>
<p>The two strategies a beginner should learn first are the most conservative ones.</p>

<h3 class="relative group">1. Selling cash-secured puts
    <div id="1-selling-cash-secured-puts" class="anchor"></div>
    
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        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#1-selling-cash-secured-puts" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h3>
<div class="admonition relative overflow-hidden rounded-lg border-l-4 my-3 px-4 py-3 shadow-sm" data-type="info">
      <div class="flex items-center gap-2 font-semibold text-inherit">
        <div class="flex shrink-0 h-5 w-5 items-center justify-center text-lg"><span class="relative block icon"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M256 0C114.6 0 0 114.6 0 256s114.6 256 256 256s256-114.6 256-256S397.4 0 256 0zM256 128c17.67 0 32 14.33 32 32c0 17.67-14.33 32-32 32S224 177.7 224 160C224 142.3 238.3 128 256 128zM296 384h-80C202.8 384 192 373.3 192 360s10.75-24 24-24h16v-64H224c-13.25 0-24-10.75-24-24S210.8 224 224 224h32c13.25 0 24 10.75 24 24v88h16c13.25 0 24 10.75 24 24S309.3 384 296 384z"/></svg>
</span></div>
        <div class="grow">
          Cash-Secured Puts in a Nutshell
        </div>
      </div><div class="admonition-content mt-3 text-base leading-relaxed text-inherit"><p>Pick a stock you'd actually want to own. Set cash aside equal to 100 shares × the strike price. Sell a put contract at that strike. The buyer pays you the premium. If the stock stays above your strike at expiration, the put expires worthless and you keep the premium and the cash. If it drops below, you buy the shares at the strike (a price you already wanted to pay) and you still keep the premium.</p></div></div><p>This is my preferred starting point. You're paid to wait for stocks you wanted to buy anyway.</p>

<h3 class="relative group">2. Selling covered calls
    <div id="2-selling-covered-calls" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#2-selling-covered-calls" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h3>
<div class="admonition relative overflow-hidden rounded-lg border-l-4 my-3 px-4 py-3 shadow-sm" data-type="info">
      <div class="flex items-center gap-2 font-semibold text-inherit">
        <div class="flex shrink-0 h-5 w-5 items-center justify-center text-lg"><span class="relative block icon"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 512 512"><path fill="currentColor" d="M256 0C114.6 0 0 114.6 0 256s114.6 256 256 256s256-114.6 256-256S397.4 0 256 0zM256 128c17.67 0 32 14.33 32 32c0 17.67-14.33 32-32 32S224 177.7 224 160C224 142.3 238.3 128 256 128zM296 384h-80C202.8 384 192 373.3 192 360s10.75-24 24-24h16v-64H224c-13.25 0-24-10.75-24-24S210.8 224 224 224h32c13.25 0 24 10.75 24 24v88h16c13.25 0 24 10.75 24 24S309.3 384 296 384z"/></svg>
</span></div>
        <div class="grow">
          Covered Calls in a Nutshell
        </div>
      </div><div class="admonition-content mt-3 text-base leading-relaxed text-inherit"><p>If you already own at least 100 shares of a stock, you can sell a call against it. The buyer pays you the premium for the right to buy your shares at a higher (strike) price. If the stock stays below the strike, the call expires and you keep your shares plus the premium. If it goes above, your shares get called away at the strike, and you still keep the premium.</p></div></div><p>This turns a position you already own into a recurring income stream at the cost of capping your upside.</p>
<p>Put together, cash-secured puts and covered calls form the <strong>Wheel</strong> - sell a put, get assigned shares, sell calls against them, get called away, sell another put. Income on every leg. I'll cover the Wheel end-to-end in a dedicated article.</p>

<h3 class="relative group">Cash-Secured Put Flow
    <div id="cash-secured-put-flow" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#cash-secured-put-flow" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h3>
<pre class="not-prose mermaid">
graph TD
    A["Set Aside Cash"] --> B{"Sell Put Option"}
    B --> C["Collect Premium"]
    C --> D{"At Expiration: Stock Price above Strike?"}
    D -- "Yes" --> E["Keep Cash + Keep Premium"]
    D -- "No" --> F["Buy Shares at Strike Price + Keep Premium"]
</pre>


<h3 class="relative group">Covered Call Flow
    <div id="covered-call-flow" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#covered-call-flow" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h3>
<pre class="not-prose mermaid">
graph TD
    A["Own 100 Shares of Stock"] --> B{"Sell Call Option"}
    B --> C["Collect Premium"]
    C --> D{"At Expiration: Stock Price below Strike?"}
    D -- "Yes" --> E["Keep Shares + Keep Premium"]
    D -- "No" --> F["Shares Called Away at Strike Price + Keep Premium"]
</pre>


<h2 class="relative group">What are the real risks?
    <div id="what-are-the-real-risks" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#what-are-the-real-risks" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h2>
<div class="admonition relative overflow-hidden rounded-lg border-l-4 my-3 px-4 py-3 shadow-sm" data-type="danger">
      <div class="flex items-center gap-2 font-semibold text-inherit">
        <div class="flex shrink-0 h-5 w-5 items-center justify-center text-lg"><span class="relative block icon"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512">
<path fill="currentColor"  d="M159.3 5.4c7.8-7.3 19.9-7.2 27.7 .1c27.6 25.9 53.5 53.8 77.7 84c11-14.4 23.5-30.1 37-42.9c7.9-7.4 20.1-7.4 28 .1c34.6 33 63.9 76.6 84.5 118c20.3 40.8 33.8 82.5 33.8 111.9C448 404.2 348.2 512 224 512C98.4 512 0 404.1 0 276.5c0-38.4 17.8-85.3 45.4-131.7C73.3 97.7 112.7 48.6 159.3 5.4zM225.7 416c25.3 0 47.7-7 68.8-21c42.1-29.4 53.4-88.2 28.1-134.4c-2.8-5.6-5.6-11.2-9.8-16.8l-50.6 58.8s-81.4-103.6-87.1-110.6C133.1 243.8 112 273.2 112 306.8C112 375.4 162.6 416 225.7 416z"/></svg></span></div>
        <div class="grow">
          Critical Warning
        </div>
      </div><div class="admonition-content mt-3 text-base leading-relaxed text-inherit"><p>Selling options is NOT free money. The math is in your favor over time, but a single unmanaged position can wipe out months of premium. Never put on a trade you don't fully understand, and never sell premium on something you wouldn't be willing to own.</p></div></div><p>The risks split cleanly by strategy.</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p><strong>Risk of <div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>selling covered calls</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div>: opportunity cost.</strong> If the stock rips far above your strike, the buyer exercises. You sell at the strike and miss the rest of the move. You still profit, just less than you would have holding the shares. This happened to me a few times. CAKE (Cheesecake company) spiked past my strike. Because I still liked the upside, I closed the call early and took a small loss on the option to keep the shares.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p><strong>Risk of <div class="flex mt-2">
  <span
    class="rounded-full bg-primary-500 dark:bg-primary-400 text-neutral-50 dark:text-neutral-800 px-1.5 py-[1px] text-xs font-normal">
    <span class="flex flex-row items-center"><span>selling cash-secured puts</span>
    </span>
  </span>
</div>: assignment at a bad price.</strong> If the stock drops well below the strike, you're obligated to buy it at the strike, possibly far above the current market. This is exactly why you should only sell puts on tickers you'd actually own long-term. Pick the wrong ticker and the &quot;discount&quot; turns into a bag-hold. I only trade very liquid and known stocks.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p>In both cases you trade unlimited upside for smaller, more consistent gains and you accept that the position needs your attention.</p>

<h2 class="relative group">Is selling option premium a good fit for financial freedom?
    <div id="is-selling-option-premium-a-good-fit-for-financial-freedom" class="anchor"></div>
    
    <span
        class="absolute top-0 w-6 transition-opacity opacity-0 -start-6 not-prose group-hover:opacity-100 select-none">
        <a class="text-primary-300 dark:text-neutral-700 !no-underline" href="#is-selling-option-premium-a-good-fit-for-financial-freedom" aria-label="Anchor">#</a>
    </span>
    
</h2>
<p>Yes, if you treat it as a business. Over the past five years it's been one of the most consistent income lines in my portfolio. A few honest observations:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>It generates real cash flow.</strong> Income that lands monthly, independent of dividends and price appreciation.</li>
<li><strong>It can lower your cost basis.</strong> Premiums collected against a long-term position effectively discount your entry over time.</li>
<li><strong>It demands active management.</strong> Not &quot;set and forget.&quot; You'll monitor positions, roll losers, defend assignments, and close winners early. Pretending otherwise is how beginners blow up accounts.</li>
<li><strong>A journal is non-negotiable.</strong> Every trade leaves a story - entry thesis, what changed, why you exited. I built Theta-Vault (my own Options Trading Journal) for exactly this reason: option-selling without a feedback loop is gambling, and the difference between a profitable year and a flat one is usually buried in trades you forgot you took.</li>
</ul>
<p>For traders willing to put in the work to learn, selling option premiums is one of the most compelling active income streams a stock portfolio can produce. In the next pieces of this series I'll walk through step-by-step examples of selling cash-secured puts and covered calls, then build the Wheel on top of them. Stay tuned!</p>
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