JEPI Dividend Calculator
JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF — a covered-call fund built for high monthly income. Project the payout with distributions reinvested (DRIP), shown as a range.
What the JEPI dividend calculator is projecting
JEPI — the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF — is not a traditional dividend fund. It holds a defensive, lower-volatility basket of roughly 130 large-cap U.S. stocks, then layers a written S&P 500 call-option strategy on top, largely through equity-linked notes (ELNs). The option premiums those calls generate are collected and paid out to shareholders monthly, which is why the distribution yield (~8.2%, asOf 2026-06) sits far above a plain index fund. This calculator starts from that yield and the fund's 0.35% expense ratio, then compounds your starting balance and monthly contributions forward, reporting annual income, portfolio value, and yield-on-cost as a p5 / median / p95 band.
The trade-off is the whole point of the fund, and the model is built to show it honestly. The written calls cap how much the equity sleeve can appreciate, so JEPI's price growth is structurally slower than the market it tracks. That is why the preset uses a deliberately low illustrative price-growth assumption (2%) and a 0% dividend-per-share growth anchor: JEPI's payout is premium-driven, not a steadily rising per-share dividend, and it swings with volatility — when markets are calm, premiums shrink and the distribution falls; when volatility spikes, it climbs. Treating that stream as if it grew like a dividend-growth stock would overstate the future income, so the calculator does not. These are assumptions you can change, not predictions.
Who a JEPI projection tends to fit
The fund is oriented toward investors who value current monthly cash flow and a smoother ride over maximum long-run growth — for example, someone at or near retirement drawing income, or an investor who wants equity exposure with less drawdown. If your priority is decades of compounding, a broad-market or dividend-growth fund keeps more of its return in price appreciation; JEPI converts much of that potential upside into income today. Toggle the Value headline to see how the capped-growth assumption shapes the terminal balance versus the income view.
DRIP compounding and the tax caution
With DRIP on, every monthly distribution buys more shares, and those shares pay their own distributions — the snowball that lifts yield-on-cost over time even when the per-share payout is flat. But two frictions matter. First, the high yield is financed by capped principal growth, so reinvesting compounds income faster than it compounds market value. Second, and more important: JEPI's distributions are largely ordinary income, not qualified dividends, because option and ELN premium income does not receive the lower qualified-dividend tax rate. Held in a taxable account, that income can be taxed at your marginal rate every year, which meaningfully erodes the after-tax result. Income strategies like this are generally more tax-efficient inside a tax-advantaged account (IRA / Roth). This tool models pre-tax figures; final tax classification is reconciled by the fund after year-end. Educational estimates, not investment advice.
Year-by-year breakdown ›
| Year | Contributed | Value (median) | Div income | Yield on cost |
|---|
Median path shown; every result also carries a p5–p95 range. Rows at every 5th year plus your chosen horizon.
Assumptions & sources ›
| Assumption | Value | Source · asOf |
|---|---|---|
| Distribution yield | ~8.2% | J.P. Morgan Asset Management JEPI fact sheet · asOf 2026-06 |
| Expense ratio | 0.35% | J.P. Morgan Asset Management · asOf 2026-06 |
| Dividend-per-share growth | 0% (assumed) | conservative anchor — premium-driven, volatile distribution · illustrative |
| Price growth | 2%/yr (assumed) | illustrative — NAV upside capped by written calls, editable input |
| Scenario band | low / base / high | reported as p5 / median / p95 — illustrative, not a probabilistic forecast |
Illustrative model, not advice. Yield and expense are fund asOf 2026-06 figures; forward growth inputs are assumptions you can change, not predictions. High yield trades long-term principal growth for current income.
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