Early Exercise of Startup Stock Options

Attorney Mary Russell counsels individuals on startup equity, including:

You are welcome to contact her at (650) 326-3412 or at info@stockoptioncounsel.com.

Planning for your startup stock options? Consider an early exercise of stock options to protect your equity stake from taxes and forfeiture.

Most people learn the hard way about the complexity of exercising stock options at a startup. If you can spare a few minutes of attention, this post will teach you about early exercise - the easy street of startup stock option exercise strategies.

Early Exercise Stock Options

An “early exercise” is an exercise of unvested stock options. You pay the exercise price to the company and file an 83(b) election with the IRS before the options vest

Early exercise makes you the owner of the shares in the eyes of the company. The shares are still subject to the options’ original vesting schedule, though, as the unvested shares can be repurchased from you if you leave the company prior to your vesting milestones. The repurchase price for unvested shares is usually the lower of your exercise price or the fair market value (“FMV”) on the date of termination. 

Early exercise with an 83(b) election also makes you the owner of the shares in the eyes of the IRS. That means you start your capital gains and, perhaps, Qualified Small Business Stock (“QSBS”) holding periods, which sets you up for the lowest possible tax rates when you sell your shares. 

Tax Benefits of Early Exercise  of Stock Options

If you early exercise while your exercise price is equal to the FMV of the common shares, the exercise itself is not taxable and therefore defers all taxation until you sell the shares and have cash gains to use to pay the taxes. 

This may seem like overkill on planning, but the tax bill for a later option exercise can snowball surprisingly quickly and make it impossible to exercise vested stock options. More on this here: Startup Stock Options - Early Expiration - The $1M Problem. Early exercise can, therefore, act as a forfeiture-avoidance strategy as it can defer taxes until sale of stock and, therefore, save people from prohibitive pre-liquidity tax bills for exercise.

When to Early Exercise Stock Options

Since options are granted with an exercise price equal to the FMV on the date of grant, it’s a safe bet to early exercise immediately after grant to be sure you can do so without a tax cost.

The most common approach is to negotiate for the right to early exercise in the grant at the offer letter stage, and then join the company and wait a while before early exercising. This allows employees to get some visibility on the company’s possibility of success and their own fit within the company. So long as the early exercise is completed while the FMV is still equal to the strike price, the early exercise is tax free.

If you early exercise (or exercise vested options) after the FMV has increased above the exercise price (such as after a round of funding following your grant date) you will have taxable income on the difference between the FMV and the exercise price in the year of exercise. (The tax rates depend on whether you are early exercising NQSO or making an qualifying early exercise of ISOs.) This might seem unappealing, as you would of course prefer to defer all taxes until sale of stock. However, some people choose to early exercise even if they have to recognize income on that early exercise in order to be taxed at exercise on the current FMV rather than paying higher taxes on a later exercise based on a higher FMV.

Investment Risk of Early Exercise Options

The downside of early exercising startup stock options is investment risk, as you have to pay the exercise price (and, perhaps, some taxes at exercise) out of pocket before you have any visibility into whether the value of the shares will go up in the future. That’s why early exercise is very common and an easy choice at early stage companies where the FMV and, therefore, the exercise price is low. For instance, a first employee might be able to exercise 1% of the company for, say, $5,000. It’s a less obvious choice when the company is at a later stage and the exercise price of stock options is significant. For instance, some startup stock options packages have a $1M+ exercise price.

Some key hires of later stage startups with higher option exercise prices negotiate for the right to early exercise (or exercise vested options) with a promissory note instead of cash. Instead of paying their significant exercise price with cash, they deliver a promissory note to the company. This is a promise to pay the exercise price at some date in the future. There is some complexity to this to address with your advisor if you are considering this path. 

Negotiating the Right to Early Exercise Options

Early exercise is not available at every company. Therefore, if you want to early exercise you will need to negotiate for this right during your offer letter negotiation or after you join the company. 

For example, some early Uber employees negotiated to add the right to early exercise to their existing stock option grants. This allowed them to early exercise their unvested options (and exercise their vested options) before the FMV of the shares skyrocketed, so that the tax bill for the exercise was only in the tens of thousands of dollars. 

Despite the out-of-pocket cost for the exercise price and taxes, this was a wise exercise choice for a few reasons. First, if they had waited and exercised after the FMV skyrocketed they would have had to pay far more in taxes to exercise - in some cases more than $1M. More on that issue here. Second, if they had failed to early exercise and ended up leaving the company prior to the company’s IPO, they would have had to come up with those astronomical tax payments before they had a market to sell the stock. This is because the company had only a 30-day post-termination exercise deadline and an absolute prohibition on sales of stock prior to IPO. Third, many of these employees purchased their shares while the company was QSBS eligible and then held the shares for the 5-year QSBS holding period. This qualified them for 0% federal tax rates on up to $10M in gains on the sale of their shares. 

ISOs v. NSOs and Early Exercise Stock Options

If you are early exercising stock options, it is more favorable to have the options granted as NQSO rather than ISOs. If you early exercise ISOs, you have to hold the shares for two years before sale for long-term capital gains tax rates on your gains. If you early exercise NSOs, you only have to hold the shares for one year for capital gains treatment. Therefore, if you are planning to early exercise immediately after the grant, you will want to ask the company to make the grant as a NQSO rather than an ISO. 

If you are not planning to early exercise, you may not want to include the right to early exercise in your documents. That’s because of the $100K limitation on ISOs. ISOs are a tax-favored stock option that are subject to certain limits under the tax code. Only $100K in exercise price of stock options can become exercisable in any given year and qualify as ISOs. So if you have a $400K exercise price grant that is intended to be ISOs, all $400K of the options will be ISOs if you do not include the right to early exercise. If you do include the right to early exercise, all $400K will become exercisable in the first year and so only $100K of the options will be ISOs. The remainder will be NSOs which are less tax favored. 

Don’t Forget the Section 83(b) Election

If you early exercise unvested stock options, you file a Section 83(b) election with the IRS within 30 days of the exercise. The consequences of a missed 83(b) election can be very, very unappealing. If you don’t have the attention necessary to follow through on that, don’t early exercise.

When to Exercise Stock Options

As you can see, early exercise of stock options is not the best choice in every situation. To learn about the best structures for a variety of cases, see Examples of Good Startup Equity Design by Company Stage. For a comprehensive analysis of when to exercise stock options, see this three-part series:

Attorney Mary Russell counsels individuals on startup equity, including:

You are welcome to contact her at (650) 326-3412 or at info@stockoptioncounsel.com.

Mary Russell

Mary Russell is an attorney and writer who writes about stock options and other compensation for startup employees, executives and founders. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Bloomberg Business, Reuters, myStockOptions.com and other outlets.

She counsels individuals on startup equity, including:

Compensation Counsel - Job Offers
Legal Counsel - Job Offers

Legal Counsel - Equity Choices

You are welcome to contact her at (650) 326-3412 or at info@stockoptioncounsel.com.

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