Startup Stock Options | Post Termination Exercise Period | The Full 10-Year Term Solution
Attorney Mary Russell counsels individuals on startup equity, including:
You are welcome to contact her at (650) 326-3412 or at info@stockoptioncounsel.com.
Originally published March 28, 2017. Updated March 17, 2023.
Startup Stock Options and the $1M Problem
The startup scene is debating this question: Should employees have a full 10 years from the date of grant to exercise vested startup stock options or should their rights to exercise expire early if they leave the company before an IPO or acquisition?
This is Part 2 of a 3-part series. See Early Expiration of Startup Stock Options - Part 1 - The $1 Million Problem for more information on the issue and Early Expiration of Startup Stock Options - Part 3 - Examples of Good Startup Equity Design by Company Stage.
Full 10-Year Term Solution
Some companies are saving their optionees from the $1 million problem of early expiration startup stock options by granting stock options that have a full 10 year term and do not expire early at termination. The law does not require an early expiration period for stock options. Ten years from date of grant is usually the maximum exercise period, as the legal landscape for stock options makes anything beyond a 10 year exercise period impractical in most cases. The 10 year exercise window (without an early exercise period) enables employees to wait for a liquidity event (IPO or acquisition) to pay their exercise price and the associated taxes. This extended structure is designed to compensate employees in a way that makes sense for them.
Startups who choose a full 10-year term in place of early expiration may do so because their recruits or founders have faced the problem of early expiration at prior companies and become disillusioned with stock options as a benefit. Or their recruits may have read about the issue and asked for it as part of their negotiation. Or their founders may have designed their equity plan to be as favorable to employees as possible as a matter of principle or as a recruiting tool.
Other companies are extending their early expiration period for existing stock options. One example of this is Pinterest, which extended the term in some cases to 7 years from the date of grant. This move was in response to their valuation and extreme transfer restrictions that made the early expiration period burdensome for option holders.
An exercise more than 90 days after the last date of employment changes tax treatment for options originally granted as Incentive Stock Options (ISOs). Such an exercise will be treated as the exercise of a Non-Qualified Stock Option (NQSO) instead. Most employees would prefer to have the choice that an extended exercise period allows, the choice between exercising within 90 days of termination of employment for ISO treatment or waiting to exercise and being subject to NQSO treatment.
You can see a list of companies that have adopted an extended option exercise period or changed from the short early expiration period to longer periods.
Current State of the Market as of 2023
Carta’s State of Private Markets for Q4 2022 shared their data on the number of options expiring in that quarter with an extended post-termination exercise period. They report that:
Employees owning 17% of all terminated options in Q4 2022 were given longer than 90 days; and
Employees exercised just 32% of their vested options before expiration during Q4
This is an increase - in my view - from the date of the market on this point in 2017 when I first wrote on this topic. However, it still leaves many startup option holders without an extended post-termination exercise period and makes exercise planning and thoughtful offer negotiation on option rights essential for startup employees and executives.
Creative Modifications to the Full 10-Year Term Solution
Companies may prefer early expiration of stock options because terminated stock options reduce dilution for other stockholders. Or they may prefer that their employees are bound to the company by the “golden handcuffs” of early expiration stock options as a retention tool.
For companies that are concerned about excessive dilution, it might make sense to eliminate early expiration only if the company’s value has increased since grant. In other words, employees have a full 10-year term only if the FMV of the common stock on the date of their departure is greater than the exercise price of the stock option. This targets the solution (tax deferral) to the problem (owing tax at exercise before liquidity). If the FMV at exercise is equal to the exercise price, then there is no taxable income to report at exercise. Therefore, an extended exercise period is not necessary to defer taxes until liquidity. This solution does not address the problem of high exercise prices; companies with high exercise prices due to high valuations may want to use RSUs instead of stock options to solve the exercise price problem.
Attorney Augie Rakow, a former partner at Orrick advising startups and investors, has another creative modification to the full 10-year term solution. He has advised clients to find a middle ground by extending exercise periods only for longer-term contributors. This addresses the company concern about retention while solving the early expiration problem for longer-term employees. For example, option agreements might allow three years to exercise after departure only if an employee has been with the company for three years. He notes that "it's a good solution for companies that want to let long-term contributors participate in the value they help create, without incentivizing employees to leave prematurely."
Can I Realistically Exercise the Options if the Company is a Success?
Due to the prevalence of early expiration stock options at startups, this becomes an essential question in evaluating an equity offer: “Can I realistically earn the value of vested equity if the company is a success?” If the option grant has a very high exercise price or could potentially lead to a huge tax bill at exercise, it may not be feasible to exercise during an early expiration period at the end of employment, making the value of vested equity impossible to capture. Clients have negotiated the removal of early expiration or other creative structures to solve this problem if it arises in the employment offer.
I hope this post has illuminated the usefulness of a full 10-year term as a solution to the problem of early expiration of startup stock options. For other alternatives to structuring startup equity, see Early Expiration of Startup Stock Options - Part 3 - Examples of Good Startup Equity Design by Company Stage. See also Early Expiration of Startup Stock Options - Part 1 - A $1 Million Problem for more information on the issue.
Thank you!
Thank you to JD McCullough for editing this post. He is a health tech entrepreneur, interested in connecting and improving businesses, products, and people.
Thank you to attorney Augie Rakow, a former partner at Orrick advising startups and investors, for sharing his creative solution to this problem.
Attorney Mary Russell counsels individuals on startup equity, including:
You are welcome to contact her at (650) 326-3412 or at info@stockoptioncounsel.com.