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JEPQ vs SPYI (2026): Which Income ETF Wins After Tax?

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JPEQ vs SPYI

Independent research for informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

All calculations presented in this article are based on data sourced from SEC filings and the company’s official website.

JEPQ vs SPYI at a Glance

EPQ vs SPYI total returns for YTD, 1-year, and since inception, showing JEPQ ahead in every period

What Are JEPQ and SPYI?

How Each Fund Generates Income

Grouped bar chart comparing JEPQ and SPYI on dividend yield and 30-day SEC yield, highlighting the gap driven by income mechanism
MetricJEPQSPYI
Dividend yield (ttm)10.35%11.72%
30-day SEC yield11.98%0.48%
Monthly income on $10,000~$86~$98

JEPQ vs SPYI: Tax Efficiency

After-Tax Income on $100,000, by Bracket

Here is the dollar difference if they were both $100,000 funds with recent trailing yields.

Grouped bar chart of current-year after-tax income from JEPQ vs SPYI on $100,000 across 24%, 32%, and 37% federal brackets, with SPYI ahead in each
Federal bracketJEPQ (after-tax)SPYI (after-tax)
24%$7,866$11,502
32%$7,038$11,465
37%$6,520$11,406

Which Belongs in a Roth or an IRA vs. a Taxable Account?

Are the Distributions Sustainable? (NAV Erosion)

Performance & Risk

Line chart of $10,000 growing since each fund's inception, showing JEPQ compounding to about $19,196 and SPYI to about $17,094
FundSince-inception annualized return$10,000 grows to
JEPQ16.84%/yr (since 5/3/22)$19,196
SPYI14.90%/yr (since 8/30/22)$17,094

Holdings Overlap: Can You Hold Both?

Four-panel bar chart comparing JEPQ and SPYI on expense ratio, top-10 concentration, number of holdings, and beta, with JEPQ higher on cost, concentration, and beta

Which Should You Choose?

Bar chart showing the 30-year future-value cost of the 0.33 percentage point expense-ratio gap between JEPQ and SPYI, rising to roughly $612,000 on a $1 million starting investment
Starting investment30-year fee-gap cost
$10,000$6,125
$100,000$61,255
$1,000,000$612,549

Frequently Asked Questions

Is JEPQ or SPYI more tax-efficient?

In a taxable account, SPYI will be generally more tax efficient. It sells and buys SPX index options under Section 1256 (60% long-term, 40% short-term) and the majority of distributions are deemed to be a return of capital, thereby deferring taxable events. Most income received by JEPQ is ordinary income generated from the ELN. If you’re talking about a Roth or an IRA, it doesn’t matter.

Which has the higher yield, JEPQ or SPYI?

This is dependent on the measured yield. SPYI’s current trailing 12-month dividend is higher (11.72% compared to 10.35%). On a 30-day SEC yield basis, it’s not apples-to-apples as SPYI’s 0.48% includes option-premium and return-of-capital income, and JEPQ’s 11.98% is closer to its actual payout. Always determine the methodology in a source.

Can I hold both JEPQ and SPYI?

Yes. They are based on different strategies, e.g. Nasdaq-100 vs S&P-500 option overlays. Still, their stock holdings are also very closely correlated and will probably go in tandem during a downturn in the market, as they are all heavily weighted with mega-cap technology stocks.

Does SPYI or JEPQ suffer NAV erosion?

Since inception, both funds have held or grown their share price while paying 10%+ distributions, funding those payouts from option premium and appreciation rather than from principal. Erosion risk rises if option premiums compress or if equities sell off for an extended stretch. Be careful not to conflate a tax classification with a proof of NAV decline; return of capital is a tax classification.

Which is cheaper, JEPQ or SPYI?

The expense ratios are 0.35% for JEPQ and 0.68% for SPYI — about $35 versus $68 per year on a $10,000 investment before compounding.

Is JEPQ or SPYI safer?

SPYI has a lower beta (0.71 compared to 0.83) and a much more diversified underlying book with 514 stocks, which normally means that it does not fluctuate as much as the other ETFs. JEPQ is considerably bigger ($39.0B as opposed to $10.5B AUM), which typically indicates tighter bid/ask spreads and more liquid trading.

Is JEPQ or SPYI better for retirement income?

Because of its tax-advantaged structure, in a taxable retirement account, SPYI can maintain more after-tax cash. JEPQ’s lower fee and better overall return might make sense in a Roth or traditional IRA, because the tax benefits that SPYI brings are not necessarily there. When matching the fund, match the account type, NOT the ticker.

References

  1. JPMorgan Asset Management. (2026). JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPQ) official fact sheet (as of March 31, 2026).
  2. JPMorgan Asset Management. (2026). JEPQ fund story and strategy overview.
  3. NEOS Investments. (2026). NEOS S&P 500 High Income ETF (SPYI) fund page (as of June 30, 2026).
  4. StockAnalysis.com. (2026, July 10). JEPQ vs. SPYI performance and holdings comparison.
  5. Dividend Vision. (2026). JEPQ vs. SPYI dividend and yield comparison.

About the Author

Usama Ali

Usama Ali is the founder of Financial Beings and an independent equity analyst active since 2020. His work is influenced by Benjamin Graham, Stephen Penman, Aswath Damodaran, Peter Lynch, and behavioral finance research from Daniel Kahneman, focusing on valuation and market expectations.

Disclaimer & Editorial Disclosure

The content published on Financial Beings is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or other professional advice, and should not be construed as a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell, or hold any security or financial instrument.

Financial Beings is an independent editorial publication and is not registered as an investment adviser with any regulatory authority, including the SEC, BaFin, or any other financial supervisory body. All analysis reflects the independent views of the author based on publicly available data, including SEC filings and official company websites.

All investments involve risk, including the possible loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Market conditions, valuations, and company fundamentals may change materially after the date of publication.

Financial Beings does not accept sponsored content, paid stock promotions, or compensation from any company discussed in its research. The author holds no positions in the securities discussed in this article unless explicitly stated otherwise. Readers should conduct their own independent research and consult a qualified financial adviser before making any investment decision.

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