If you bought YieldMax TSLA Option Income Strategy ETF (NYSEARCA:TSLY) for the double-digit yield, look at your account. The distributions landed. The share price did not follow Tesla up the mountain. That gap is the hidden cost, and it is bigger than the expense ratio.
What You’re Actually Paying
TSLY is a synthetic covered-call fund on Tesla. It parks cash in Treasury bills, sells call options on TSLA, and hands the option premium back to you as distributions. That works when Tesla trades sideways. It quietly punishes you when Tesla runs.
Here is the receipt. Over the past year, Tesla stock is up 31.59%. TSLY is up 34.01% on a total-return basis, which sounds fine until you widen the window. Since TSLY’s inception in November 2022, the fund is up 55.36%. Over roughly the same stretch, TSLA is up 86.21% over five years. The share price alone tells the story: TSLY closed at $26.73 on July 10, 2026, while its $17.65 starting NAV starting NAV appears preserved on a total-return basis only because distributions are re-added. Strip out the distributions, and the share price has bled.
The fund’s public expense ratio is not disclosed in the current snapshot data, but YieldMax funds in this category typically carry elevated fees relative to holding the underlying directly (0.99% management fee, verify before publishing). Compare that to holding TSLA directly at brokerage cost of zero. Over a decade, that fee drag alone could compound into a meaningful haircut, and that is before the opportunity cost stacked on top.
The Part the Factsheet Doesn’t Highlight
Look under the hood. As of April 30, 2026, TSLY held roughly $877 million in Treasury bills across five CUSIPs, plus a small pile of TSLA call options. That is your “Tesla exposure”: T-bills and a synthetic overlay. The fund also carries $84.8 million in liabilities against $922 million in assets, with net derivative positions running at -7.67% of net assets. When Tesla rallies past the strike, those short calls owe money, and the NAV takes the hit.
Then there is the distribution machine. TSLY paid $13.29 per share over the trailing 12 months, but the forward annualized run rate has compressed to $3.33. In 2024, monthly checks ran between $0.40 and $1.29. In 2026, they have shrunk to weekly payments mostly between $0.26 and $0.35, with one payout at just $0.0707. A meaningful slice of these distributions in prior years arrived as return of capital, meaning the fund handed you back your own money and called it yield. That is not tax-free forever. It lowers your cost basis and defers a bill.
The Cheaper Mirror
The low-cost alternative is TSLA itself. Zero management fee at most brokers, no capped upside, no synthetic overlay, no weekly 1099 complexity. If income is the goal, a barbell of short-duration Treasuries (iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:SGOV) or SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF (NYSEARCA:BIL), both low-cost) plus a modest direct TSLA position replicates the fund’s actual balance sheet more transparently, at a fraction of the cost, and lets you keep the upside above whatever strike TSLY happens to be shorting that week. The trade-off is clear: you give up the automatic call-writing convenience and the headline yield figure.
What This Means for You
The right question is: what did I give up to get that yield? If TSLY’s distributions have been landing in your account while its share price grinds lower and Tesla stock keeps making highs, you have already paid the hidden cost. Whether the yield is worth capped upside, NAV decay, and taxable return-of-capital is a decision to make with your eyes open, not the marketing sheet.
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