Options strategies have some of the most complex tax rules in trading. Spreads, straddles, covered calls, and LEAPS each have their own treatment โ€” and getting it wrong on your return is common. Here's a strategy-by-strategy breakdown.

The Foundation: How Single Options Are Taxed

Before diving into strategies, understand the base rules:

Vertical Spreads (Credit & Debit)

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Vertical spreads โ€” bull put spreads, bear call spreads, bull call spreads, bear put spreads โ€” are taxed position by position, not as a single unit.

Credit Spreads (Selling Premium)

Debit Spreads (Buying Premium)

๐Ÿ”ต Holding Period Note

Most vertical spread traders hold positions for weeks or less, so virtually all spread gains and losses are short-term. The 12-month holding period for long-term treatment is rarely achieved in active spread trading.

Iron Condors and Iron Butterflies

These multi-leg strategies are taxed as two separate vertical spreads โ€” the call spread and the put spread are each tracked individually. There's no special "iron condor" tax treatment.

Covered Calls

Covered calls are one of the most tax-nuanced strategies for stock holders. The tax rules depend on whether the call is "qualified" or "non-qualified."

Qualified Covered Calls

Non-Qualified Covered Calls (Deep ITM)

โš  Warning

Writing a non-qualified covered call against stock you've held for 11 months can reset your holding period clock โ€” turning a nearly-long-term gain into a fully short-term one if the stock is called away. Always check strike price qualification before writing calls against appreciated long-term positions.

Straddles and Strangles

Straddles (long call + long put on the same underlying, same strike) trigger the IRS "straddle rules" under IRC ยง1092. These are among the most complex rules in the tax code:

If you actively trade straddles โ€” or any strategy that creates offsetting positions โ€” professional CPA guidance is not optional. The straddle rules can dramatically change your tax outcome.

LEAPS (Long-Term Equity Anticipation Securities)

LEAPS are simply options with expirations greater than one year. They can qualify for long-term capital gains treatment โ€” but only if you hold the LEAP itself for more than 12 months.

โœ“ Strategy Opportunity

LEAPS on bullish positions can be a tax-efficient way to gain equity exposure โ€” you can achieve long-term capital gains treatment while controlling more shares with less capital than outright stock ownership. This doesn't work for short LEAPS (options you've written).

Cash-Settled Index Options: The Section 1256 Advantage

This is the big one that most options traders miss. Broad-based index options โ€” SPX, NDX, RUT, VIX โ€” are Section 1256 contracts. They get the favorable 60/40 treatment:

SPY, QQQ, and IWM options โ€” even though they track the same indexes โ€” are NOT Section 1256 contracts. Switching from SPY options to SPX options (with similar notional exposure) is a legal and significant tax upgrade.

Common Mistakes Options Traders Make on Their Return

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