ETF distributions have come a long way. Depending on the fund, investors can receive income annually, semi-annually, quarterly, monthly, or even weekly. As of June 2026, however, there still isn’t a ETF that pays distributions every single trading day (yet).
That hasn’t stopped investors from trying to build their own daily income stream. By carefully staggering several weekly-paying ETFs, it is technically possible to create a portfolio where distributions land in your brokerage Monday through Friday.
Before getting too excited, though, it’s worth emphasizing that this is largely a withdrawal-phase strategy. If you’re simply reinvesting distributions, you’re adding complexity, tax reporting headaches, and potentially higher fees without much practical benefit.
Still, for retirees who genuinely want cash hitting their account every weekday, Roundhill Investments offers enough weekly-paying ETFs to make it possible. Fair warning: many of these funds use derivatives, covered calls, leverage, or cryptocurrency exposure. They are not beginner investments.
My Five-Day Roundhill Income Portfolio
- Monday: Roundhill Magnificent Seven Covered Call ETF (MAGY)
Yield: 25.7% | Expense Ratio: 0.99% | Sells covered calls on the Magnificent Seven stocks via an underlying ETF that owns them. - Tuesday: Roundhill BRKB WeeklyPay ETF (BRKW)
Yield: 18.44% | Expense Ratio: 0.99% | Provides income-oriented exposure to Berkshire Hathaway using swaps and 1.2x leverage. - Wednesday: Roundhill Weekly T-Bill ETF (WEEK)
Yield: 3.46% | Expense Ratio: 0.19% | Invests in a ladder of 0-3 month Treasury bills and distributes income weekly. - Thursday: Roundhill Bitcoin Covered Call Strategy ETF (YBTC)
Yield: 37.44% | Expense Ratio: 0.96% | Generates income by selling covered calls against a spot Bitcoin ETF. - Friday: Roundhill S&P 500 0DTE Covered Call Strategy ETF (XDTE)
Yield: 11.72% | Expense Ratio: 0.97% | Uses overnight S&P 500 exposure and daily zero-day-to-expiry index covered calls.
Should You Actually Invest In This ETF Portfolio?
Personally, I find this setup more gimmick than necessity. The overwhelming majority of investors would likely be better served by a low-cost index ETF and a systematic withdrawal plan. If income is needed, shares can simply be sold periodically. From a total return perspective, that often produces a better outcome than chasing high distribution rates.
That said, investing is as much behavioral as it is mathematical. If receiving cash every weekday helps someone stay invested during market volatility and avoid emotional decisions, there may be value in that. For retirees already in the withdrawal phase, comfortable with complexity, and specifically seeking daily cash flow, it may be one of the few ways currently available to build an ETF portfolio that pays five days a week.
Just recognize what you’re buying. Many of these funds carry high fees, rely heavily on derivatives, distribute significant amounts of return of capital, and can be considerably more complex than traditional index funds. For most investors, this is unnecessary.