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SPYI

SPYI Dividend Calculator

NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF — project the monthly distribution, portfolio value, and yield-on-cost with dividends reinvested (DRIP). Every result is a range, not a single number.

Distribution yield 12.0% Payout Monthly Strategy Covered call Expense 0.68% NEOS fund page · as of 2026-06 · illustrative
Projected annual distribution income — year 25 · SPYI
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Portfolio value Yield on cost
Median path Range (p5–p95) Annual distribution income
Set your inputs — SPYI's distribution is option-premium driven and modeled with zero per-share growth, so the projection is deliberately conservative. Markets vary, so the answer is a range, not one number.
Year-by-year breakdown
YearContributedValue (median)Distribution incomeYield on cost
Assumptions & sources

Illustrative model, not investment advice. Starting distribution yield (12.0%) and expense ratio (0.68%) are NEOS fund-page figures, as of 2026-06; the trailing-12-month distribution yield reported across sources was ~11.9%. Forward price- and distribution-growth are assumptions you can change, not predictions.

Because SPYI is a covered-call income fund, per-share distribution growth is modeled at 0% (conservative): the payout is option-premium and return-of-capital driven and swings with volatility, not a steadily growing per-share dividend. Its high distribution is financed by capped index upside, so forward price growth is set low (3%). Every output is a p5 / median / p95 range from a low, base, and high scenario; the band is an illustrative scenario spread, not a probabilistic forecast.

Sources: NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF fund page (distribution yield, expense ratio). Figures refresh on our monthly cadence.

What SPYI is, and who it fits

SPYI, the NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF, holds the S&P 500 and then sells S&P 500 index call options against it, handing most of the collected option premium back to shareholders as a large monthly distribution. Launched in 2022 and actively managed, it targets current income of roughly 12% a year from large-cap exposure — a very different job from a plain index fund like VOO, which pays about 1.2% and is held for total return. The trade-off is structural, not incidental: the written calls cap how much of a strong S&P 500 rally the fund can capture, so a high headline yield is paid for with limited long-term principal growth.

That is who SPYI fits, and who it does not. It suits an investor who wants cash now — a retiree or someone building a monthly income stream from broad U.S. equities without assembling their own covered-call trades. It fits less well if your goal is the largest possible balance decades out, because a capped-upside fund will typically trail the underlying index over long horizons. This calculator makes that tension visible: it models per-share distribution growth at zero, so the projection leans conservative rather than extrapolating a rich yield forward as if it compounded like a growing dividend.

DRIP compounding — and why the band matters

Turn DRIP on and each monthly distribution buys more shares, which pay their own distributions next month — the snowball effect. But reinvesting a ~12% payout is not the same as reinvesting a growing 3% dividend from a quality-screened fund. Part of SPYI's distribution can be return of capital, meaning some months you are handed back a slice of your own principal rather than newly earned income; reinvesting that is not free growth. The p5 / median / p95 band exists precisely because option premium rises and falls with volatility, so the honest output is a spread, not a point estimate. Toggle to Value to watch the same tension from the portfolio-balance side.

A note on taxes

SPYI's index options are treated as Section 1256 contracts, taxed 60% long-term / 40% short-term regardless of holding period, and part of each distribution is often classified as return of capital, which defers tax and lowers your cost basis until you sell. That can make the fund relatively tax-efficient in a taxable account, but return of capital is a deferral, not a free lunch — a lower basis means a larger eventual capital gain. This is general information, not tax advice; confirm your own situation with a qualified professional. All figures here are illustrative and dated as of 2026-06.

Compare with the other high-distribution income funds — JEPI and JEPQ run a similar covered-call trade-off — or with the underlying index via VOO. To pressure-test living on the payout, use Live off dividends; to see after-tax DRIP with a distribution-cut stress overlay, use the Dividend snowball.

Written by Author to be finalized before launch · Updated 2026-07-06

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