Equity compensation can be the difference between retiring comfortably and just paying bills. But most engineers don't understand what they're signing. After reviewing thousands of offer letters and helping engineers evaluate equity packages, I've compiled everything you need to make informed decisions.

Equity Types: Quick Comparison

Type Best For Tax Timing Risk Level Liquidity
RSUs Public companies, risk-averse At vesting Low High (public)
ISOs Early employees, long hold At sale Medium Low until exit
NSOs Contractors, late-stage At exercise Medium Low until exit
Phantom Stock Private companies, simplicity At payout Low Tied to event
ESPP Public company employees At sale Low High

RSUs (Restricted Stock Units)

How RSUs Work

RSUs are promises to give you company shares after vesting conditions are met. You receive actual shares on the vesting date—no purchase required.

Typical Vesting Schedule:

  • 4-year vest with 1-year cliff
  • 25% vests at 12 months, then monthly/quarterly thereafter
  • Some companies use backloaded schedules (Amazon: 5/15/40/40%)

RSU Tax Treatment

Event What Happens Tax Owed
Grant date Receive RSU agreement None
Vesting date Shares delivered to you Ordinary income on full value
Sale You sell shares Capital gains on appreciation since vest

Example:

  • Granted 1,000 RSUs at $100/share value
  • At vesting, stock price is $150
  • Taxable income: $150,000 (ordinary income rates)
  • If you sell later at $200: $50,000 capital gain

RSU Withholding Methods

Method How It Works Pros Cons
Sell-to-cover Company sells shares to cover taxes No cash outlay Reduces share count
Net settlement Company withholds shares No cash outlay Reduces share count
Cash transfer You pay taxes in cash Keep all shares Need liquid cash

Pro Tip: At higher tax brackets, default withholding (22% federal) is often insufficient. Set aside additional cash or increase withholding to avoid April surprises.


Stock Options: ISOs vs NSOs

ISO (Incentive Stock Options)

ISOs are tax-advantaged options available only to employees.

Tax Treatment:

Event ISO Tax Impact
Grant None
Exercise (hold shares) None for regular tax; AMT on spread
Sale (after holding period*) Long-term capital gains on full gain
Sale (before holding period) Ordinary income on spread at exercise

*Holding period: 2 years from grant AND 1 year from exercise

AMT Warning: The spread at exercise (market price - strike price) is an AMT preference item. Large exercises can trigger significant AMT liability even without selling shares.

Example:

  • Strike price: $1
  • Exercise price: $10
  • You exercise 10,000 shares
  • AMT preference item: $90,000
  • If AMT pushes you over threshold: ~$25,000 additional tax owed

NSO (Non-Qualified Stock Options)

NSOs are simpler but less tax-advantaged:

Event NSO Tax Impact
Grant None
Exercise Ordinary income on spread
Sale Capital gains on post-exercise appreciation

NSO vs ISO Decision Framework:

Factor Favors ISO Favors NSO
Expected holding period >1 year post-exercise <1 year
Current income level Lower bracket Higher bracket
AMT exposure Low existing AMT Already paying AMT
Liquidity needs Can afford to wait Need cash sooner

Phantom Stock / Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs)

How Phantom Stock Works

Phantom stock provides the economic benefit of ownership without actual shares. You receive cash payments tied to stock value, typically at exit events.

Structure:

Component Description
Grant Units assigned, tracking stock price
Vesting Same as options/RSUs (typically 4 years)
Payout Cash equal to unit value at trigger event
Triggers Acquisition, IPO, or set date

Tax Treatment

Event Tax Impact
Grant None
Vesting None (unlike RSUs)
Payout Ordinary income on full amount

Pros:

  • No purchase required
  • No AMT concerns
  • Simple administration

Cons:

  • Taxed as ordinary income (no capital gains)
  • Usually only liquid at exit
  • No actual ownership rights

ESPP (Employee Stock Purchase Plans)

How ESPPs Work

ESPPs allow employees to purchase company stock at a discount through payroll deductions.

Standard Terms:

  • 15% discount from lower of start or end price
  • 6-month purchase periods
  • Max contribution: $25,000/year (at grant value)

ESPP Math Example

Factor Value
Offering period start price $100
Purchase date price $120
Purchase price (15% off lower) $85
Immediate gain if sold $35/share (41% return)

Strategy: For maximum return, contribute the maximum allowed, then sell immediately after purchase. The 15% guaranteed discount provides immediate return with minimal risk.


Valuation Frameworks

Startup Equity Valuation

For private companies, use this framework:

Factor Question to Ask Impact
Preferred stock price What's the 409A valuation? Sets baseline value
Dilution What's the fully-diluted share count? Determines % ownership
Exit scenarios Realistic exit range? Determines upside
Liquidation preference How much preferred gets first? Can wipe out common
Time to liquidity When could this be liquid? Discount for illiquidity

Simplified Valuation:

Expected Value = (Shares × Exit Price × Your %) - Exercise Cost / Probability of Exit

Example:

  • 10,000 options, strike $1
  • Company valued at $100M, 10M shares outstanding
  • Your ownership: 0.1%
  • Estimated exit: $500M (50% probability), $0 (50% probability)
  • Expected value: (0.1% × $500M × 50%) - $10,000 = $240,000

Public Company RSU Valuation

Component Calculation
Gross value Shares × Current price
Tax-adjusted value Gross × (1 - marginal tax rate)
Present value Tax-adjusted ÷ (1 + discount rate)^years

Example:

  • 1,000 RSUs at $150/share
  • 4-year vest, 35% marginal rate
  • 5% discount rate
  • Present value: ~$88,000 (vs. $150,000 gross)

Equity Negotiation Benchmarks

Startup Equity by Stage

Stage Engineer Level Typical Equity Range
Pre-seed Founding engineer 1-5%
Seed First 5 engineers 0.25-1%
Series A Senior engineer 0.1-0.5%
Series B Senior engineer 0.05-0.25%
Series C+ Senior engineer 0.01-0.1%

Public Company RSU Benchmarks (2026)

Level Annual RSU Value (Big Tech) Annual RSU Value (Mid-tier)
L3/E3 (Junior) $30,000-60,000 $15,000-30,000
L4/E4 (Mid) $60,000-120,000 $30,000-60,000
L5/E5 (Senior) $120,000-250,000 $50,000-120,000
L6/E6 (Staff) $250,000-500,000 $100,000-200,000
L7+ (Principal+) $500,000+ $200,000+

Red Flags in Equity Offers

Red Flag What It Means Action
No 409A valuation Early stage or disorganized Ask for recent valuation
Single-trigger acceleration only Less protection Negotiate double-trigger
10-year expiration on ISOs Standard Acceptable
90-day post-termination exercise Short window Negotiate extension
No early exercise Can't start capital gains clock Consider requesting
Liquidation preference >1x VCs get paid first, multiple times Understand waterfall
Full ratchet anti-dilution Future rounds could hurt you Understand dilution risk

Tax Planning Strategies

83(b) Election

For early-exercised options or restricted stock:

Without 83(b) With 83(b)
Taxed on spread at vest Taxed on spread at grant
Ordinary income rates Start capital gains clock early
No risk if stock drops Pay tax even if stock goes to $0

When to use 83(b):

  • Very early stage (low current value)
  • High confidence in company
  • Can afford tax payment now

Deadline: Must file within 30 days of exercise. No exceptions.

Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS)

If stock qualifies:

  • Exclude up to $10M or 10x basis from capital gains
  • Requires 5+ year hold
  • Company must be C-corp under $50M assets at issuance

References

  1. IRS. "Publication 525: Taxable and Nontaxable Income." IRS.gov, 2025.
  2. Cooley GO. "Startup Company Lawyer Resources." Cooley.com.
  3. Index Ventures. "The Option Plan Guide for European Startups." 2024.
  4. NCEO. "Equity Compensation Overview." National Center for Employee Ownership.

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