For UK retail options trading in 2026/27: GIA (General Investment Account) is the default wrapper for active options trading — gains are CGT-taxable above the £3,000 annual allowance. Standard ISAs do NOT permit options trading as a general rule — HMRC restricts derivatives in ISAs. Some brokers (notably Hargreaves Lansdown) permit covered-call writing on ISA-held shares as a specific exception — confirm with your broker. SIPPs vary widely: some permit options trading (notably Saxo SIPP), most don't.
The general principle
HMRC's ISA Regulations 1998 (as amended) define what investments can be held in an ISA. Options aren't a "qualifying investment" under standard ISA rules — derivatives are generally excluded.
That said, two specific exceptions exist:
- Covered call writing on shares already in the ISA. Some brokers permit this on the grounds that it's an "income-generating activity on existing qualifying investments" rather than separate options trading. HL is the most notable example.
- Specific ETFs that internally use options. Covered call ETFs (e.g., JEPI's UK equivalents) and option-based income ETFs are themselves qualifying ISA investments because they're collective investment schemes.
Wrapper-by-wrapper rules
Stocks & Shares ISA
- Direct options trading: Generally not permitted.
- Covered call writing on existing ISA shares: Permitted at specific brokers (HL allows this).
- Option-based ETFs: Permitted (e.g. covered call ETFs).
- Tax: Tax-free growth + income inside the wrapper, including any covered-call premiums.
SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension)
- Direct options trading: Varies by broker. Saxo, Interactive Brokers (limited), AJ Bell (limited) permit certain options. HL allows covered calls only.
- Permitted strategies typically: Buying calls/puts, covered calls. Selling naked options is usually prohibited.
- Tax: Tax-free growth in wrapper. Withdrawals subject to pension rules (25% tax-free up to LSA cap).
GIA (General Investment Account / unwrapped)
- Direct options trading: All strategies permitted.
- Tax: CGT applies to gains above £3,000/year (2026/27): 18% basic / 24% higher.
- Bed-and-breakfasting 30-day rule applies — see the 30-day rule guide.
Junior ISA / Junior SIPP
- Options trading: Generally not permitted (same rules as adult ISA / SIPP).
- Option-based ETFs: Permitted.
The covered call ISA workaround
If you own shares inside an ISA and want to generate option income, Hargreaves Lansdown allows you to:
- Hold the underlying shares in your S&S ISA.
- Write (sell) covered call options against them.
- Premium received goes into the ISA as cash and remains tax-free.
- If assigned, the shares are sold at the strike — gain is tax-free inside the ISA.
Restrictions: only specific underlyings are allowed (typically large-cap FTSE 100). Naked calls are not permitted. Cash-secured puts on shares you'd like to own (a separate strategy) are generally not allowed.
The economic effect: same as covered call writing in a GIA, but tax-free on the premium. For a £50k position writing 1% monthly premium, that's a £6,000/year tax-free income stream.
Strategic implications
For income strategies (covered calls, cash-secured puts)
The wheel strategy (cash-secured put → assignment → covered call → assignment → cash-secured put) is most tax-efficient in a SIPP if permitted by your broker. Second-best: GIA with active CGT management. Worst: ISA (impossible except for the covered-call subset on existing shares).
For directional strategies (long calls, long puts)
GIA is the only practical option for most retail. Some SIPP brokers permit buying calls/puts as a directional hedge — confirm before opening.
For volatility strategies (iron condors, straddles)
GIA only. The complexity of multi-leg positions makes them impossible in standard ISA/SIPP setups.
For hedging an existing portfolio
If you have a £100k ISA, you cannot buy puts inside the ISA to hedge it. You have to either: (a) hold an option-based hedging ETF inside the ISA (e.g. an inverse FTSE 100 ETF), or (b) hold cash outside the ISA in a GIA and buy puts there.
Tax-rate comparison by wrapper
| Wrapper | Tax on options gains (assuming higher-rate income) |
|---|---|
| ISA (where permitted) | 0% (tax-free) |
| SIPP (where permitted) | 0% inside wrapper (income tax on withdrawal) |
| GIA (above £3k CGT allowance) | 24% on gains |
| GIA (above £3k allowance, additional rate) | 24% on gains |
For active options traders generating £20k+/year of gains, the wrapper choice can save £4,000+/year of tax. For occasional traders below £3k annual gains, the choice is administrative — same tax outcome.
Pitfalls to avoid
- Trying to "smuggle" options into a standard ISA. HMRC will treat the ISA as void from that point — all "ISA" gains thereafter become taxable.
- Assuming all SIPPs allow options. Most don't. Check before opening.
- Covered call risk in ISA. If assigned, the shares are sold out of the ISA — the cash stays inside but you've lost the underlying position.
- Forgetting bed-and-breakfasting 30-day rule. Selling and re-buying the same options within 30 days blocks the CGT loss.
Sources and methodology
Rules above follow HMRC's ISA Regulations 1998 (as amended) and individual broker rules as of May 2026. Always confirm specific permitted strategies with your broker. For complex wrapper decisions, see the tax adviser editorial recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.
Related options guides
How UK Tax Drag holds itself to account
Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.