Options Strategy Comparisons

Updated 6 June 2026 · by Theo Chen

Most strategy questions are really a choice between two close alternatives - sell a covered call or a cash-secured put, cap your risk with a spread or back it with cash, buy the stock or get paid to wait for it. Each guide below settles one head-to-head with a plain verdict, a side-by-side table, and a link to the calculator so you can run your own numbers. For the whole menu in one view, see the strategy comparison hub.

Income strategy head-to-heads

Spreads & defined-risk

Volatility & leverage

  • Strangle vs Straddle Two long-volatility plays - cheaper-but-wider vs costlier-but-tighter.
  • LEAPS vs Shares Stock-like exposure for less capital - with an expiry and no dividends.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best options strategy?

There is no single best one - it depends on your goal, capital and risk tolerance. Income sellers lean on covered calls and cash-secured puts; defined-risk traders use spreads. The comparisons here weigh each pair so you can match one to your situation.

Which options strategy is the safest?

Defined-risk structures cap the loss up front: a bull put spread, an iron condor or a collar each has a known maximum loss, unlike a naked put. "Safer" still means real risk, so size positions to the loss you could absorb.

Covered call or cash-secured put - which should a beginner start with?

A cash-secured put is the usual first trade: it pays you to wait to buy a stock you already want, with the full cash set aside. A covered call needs 100 shares first. The two are the halves of the wheel.

Related tools and guides

Educational explainer only — not financial advice. Examples are illustrative and exclude commissions, early assignment and dividends. Confirm the mechanics and size positions to your own risk tolerance.