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    Equity Compensation Tax Guide: ESPP, NSO, and Section 83(b)

    ESPP shares purchased at a discount generate ordinary income on the discount portion — the amount depends on whether you make a qualifying disposition (hold 2+ years from offering date and 1+ year from purchase) or disqualifying disposition. Qualifying: ordinary income limited to the actual discount received; any excess is LTCG. Disqualifying: ordinary income equals the spread between FMV and purchase price on the purchase date. NSOs generate ordinary income and FICA at exercise equal to the spread between FMV and strike price — this is reported on your W-2 and withheld like regular wages. No AMT adjustment applies (unlike ISOs). Section 83(b) elections on restricted stock shift taxation from vesting to the grant/transfer date, locking in tax at a low FMV. The election must be filed within 30 days, is irrevocable, and starts the holding period for both LTCG and QSBS purposes. Each vehicle requires careful attention to cost basis reporting, which brokers frequently get wrong.

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    Beyond RSUs and ISOs, three other equity compensation vehicles affect millions of employees and founders: Employee Stock Purchase Plans (ESPPs), Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs), and restricted stock eligible for Section 83(b) elections. Each has fundamentally different tax mechanics. ESPPs under IRC Section 423 offer a statutory discount of up to 15% with a lookback provision, but the distinction between qualifying and disqualifying dispositions determines whether the discount is ordinary income or capital gain — and incorrect cost basis reporting by brokers is endemic. NSOs trigger ordinary income and FICA at exercise regardless of holding period, but carry Section 409A deferred compensation risks that ISOs do not. Section 83(b) elections on restricted stock allow founders to pay tax on a low grant-date value rather than a potentially enormous vesting-date value, but the election is irrevocable and the 30-day deadline is absolute. Together, these three vehicles cover the equity compensation landscape for employees at every stage from startup to large public company.

    Key mechanics

    ESPP qualifying vs. disqualifying dispositions and the basis trap

    An Employee Stock Purchase Plan under IRC Section 423 allows employees to purchase company stock at a discount — typically 15% below FMV, often with a lookback provision that uses the lower of the FMV on the offering date or the purchase date. The annual purchase limit is $25,000 of stock (measured by FMV at the offering date, not the discounted price). Contributions are made through after-tax payroll deductions during the offering period (typically 6-24 months), and shares are purchased at the end of each purchase period.

    The tax treatment of ESPP shares depends entirely on whether the disposition is qualifying or disqualifying. A qualifying disposition requires holding the shares at least 2 years from the offering date AND 1 year from the purchase date. For a qualifying disposition, the ordinary income recognized is limited to the lesser of: (a) the actual discount on the purchase date (the difference between FMV on purchase date and the price you paid), or (b) the FMV on the offering date minus the offering price (essentially, the statutory discount percentage applied to the offering-date FMV). Any remaining gain above the purchase-date FMV is long-term capital gain. Critically, for qualifying dispositions with a lookback provision, the ordinary income is capped at the offering-date discount — even if the stock rose significantly between the offering date and purchase date.

    A disqualifying disposition occurs when you sell before satisfying both holding periods. For disqualifying dispositions, the ordinary income is the spread between the FMV on the purchase date and the price you actually paid — the full discount benefit, including any lookback gain. This is reported as W-2 income (though typically without FICA). Any additional gain above FMV is capital gain (short-term or long-term depending on holding period from purchase date).

    The basis trap is the most common ESPP tax error. Brokers report ESPP sales on Form 1099-B, but the cost basis reported is almost always the discounted purchase price — NOT the adjusted basis that includes the ordinary income component. If you enter the 1099-B as-is, you are taxed on the discount twice: once as W-2 income and again as capital gain. You must adjust the cost basis on Form 8949 to add the ordinary income portion to your basis. For example, if you purchased at $85 with FMV of $100 and the $15 discount was reported as W-2 income, your adjusted basis is $100, not $85. Failure to make this adjustment is the single most common ESPP error on tax returns and results in systematic overpayment.

    ESPP qualifying disposition: ordinary income capped at offering-date discount; excess is LTCG. Disqualifying: ordinary income equals full purchase-date spread. Always adjust 1099-B cost basis to include the W-2 income component. (IRC §423; IRC §421(a); IRC §423(c); IRS Form 3922)

    NSO exercise mechanics, FICA, and Section 409A risk

    Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs, also called NQSOs) are the default form of stock option compensation — any option that does not qualify as an ISO under Section 422 is an NSO. At exercise, the spread between FMV and the exercise price is ordinary compensation income, reported on the employee's W-2. Unlike ISOs, there is no AMT adjustment — the income is in the regular tax system from the start. Unlike RSU vesting, NSO exercise income is also subject to FICA taxes: Social Security (6.2% up to the $184,500 wage base for 2026), Medicare (1.45% with no cap), and Additional Medicare Tax (0.9% on wages above $200,000/$250,000). The employer also pays its FICA share (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare).

    Withholding at exercise follows the supplemental wage rules: 22% federal on the first $1 million, 37% above $1 million — the same as RSUs. State withholding varies. The withholding gap problem is identical to RSUs — employees in higher brackets will owe additional tax at filing. The employer typically satisfies withholding through a cashless exercise (the broker sells enough shares to cover the exercise cost plus withholding) or a sell-to-cover arrangement.

    After exercise, the cost basis of the shares is the FMV on the exercise date (the same value that was included in W-2 income). The holding period for capital gains purposes begins at exercise. If the employee holds for more than one year from exercise and sells at a gain, the gain above FMV is a long-term capital gain. If sold within one year, the gain is short-term. If the stock drops below FMV at exercise, the employee has a capital loss.

    The Section 409A risk is specific to NSOs and does not apply to ISOs. Under IRC Section 409A, a stock option is treated as deferred compensation (and subject to 409A's stringent rules) unless the exercise price is at least equal to the FMV on the grant date. If the exercise price is below FMV (a "discounted option"), the option is subject to 409A, meaning the spread is taxable at vesting (not exercise), subject to an additional 20% penalty tax, and subject to premium interest from the date the option vested. Section 409A violations are catastrophic — the 20% penalty plus interest can exceed the value of the option itself. This is why accurate 409A valuations are critical for startup companies issuing options: if the IRS determines that the 409A valuation was too low (i.e., the options were granted at a discount), every option holder faces retroactive penalties. Employees cannot control 409A valuations, but they should verify that their company obtained an independent 409A valuation (a "safe harbor" valuation under Treasury Regulation 1.409A-1(b)(5)(iv)) before relying on the strike price.

    NSO exercise creates ordinary income + FICA on the full spread. No AMT adjustment. Section 409A applies if exercise price is below FMV at grant — 20% penalty tax plus interest. (IRC §83(a); IRC §3121; IRC §409A; Treas. Reg. §1.409A-1(b)(5)(iv))

    Section 83(b) election: when it works and when it backfires

    The Section 83(b) election is available when an employee or founder receives property (typically shares of stock) that is subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture — meaning the shares are subject to vesting. Without a Section 83(b) election, IRC Section 83(a) provides that the property is taxed when the forfeiture risk lapses (at vesting), based on the FMV at that time. With an 83(b) election, the recipient elects to include the value of the property in income at the time of transfer (grant/exercise), based on the FMV at that time — even though the property is not yet vested.

    The 83(b) election is most powerful for startup founders and very early employees who receive restricted stock at a low FMV. If a founder receives 1 million shares at a FMV of $0.001/share (total value $1,000), filing an 83(b) election triggers $1,000 of ordinary income at transfer. All subsequent appreciation — even if the shares become worth $10 million — is capital gain, not ordinary income. Without the election, each vesting tranche would be taxed as ordinary income at the FMV on the vesting date: if 250,000 shares vest when the FMV is $10/share, the founder owes income tax on $2.5 million of ordinary income. The savings from the 83(b) election can be seven figures.

    The election backfires in two scenarios. First, if the recipient forfeits unvested shares (leaves the company before vesting), they do not get a refund of the tax paid under the 83(b) election. They can claim an ordinary loss deduction for the amount they paid for the forfeited shares, but the tax paid on the 83(b) election income is not recoverable. If a founder pays $1,000 in income tax on an 83(b) election and later forfeits the shares, the $1,000 is a sunk cost. The risk is proportional to the tax paid — which is why low-FMV 83(b) elections carry minimal risk. Second, if the FMV at transfer turns out to be higher than the FMV at the vesting dates (the stock drops), the founder paid tax on more income than they would have without the election. This is unusual for startups but can occur with restricted stock awards at public companies.

    The 30-day filing requirement deserves emphasis: the election must be filed with the IRS within 30 calendar days of the property transfer date. The election is made by sending a written statement to the IRS service center where the taxpayer files, including a description of the property, the date of transfer, the fair market value, the amount paid, and a statement that the election is being made under Section 83(b). A copy must be attached to the tax return for the year of transfer. The election is irrevocable — once made, it cannot be undone even if circumstances change dramatically. The IRS has consistently denied late 83(b) elections, and courts have upheld these denials. This is one of the few areas of tax law where a missed deadline is truly fatal to the planning strategy.

    83(b) election shifts taxation from vesting to transfer at current (low) FMV. Irrevocable, 30-day deadline. No refund if shares are forfeited. Most valuable for low-FMV startup stock. (IRC §83(b); IRC §83(a); Treas. Reg. §1.83-2)

    Section 83(b) and QSBS Section 1202 interaction for founders

    The interaction between Section 83(b) elections and Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under IRC Section 1202 creates potentially the most valuable tax outcome available to individual taxpayers. Section 1202 provides for exclusion of up to $10 million of gain (or 10 times the adjusted basis, whichever is greater) on the sale of QSBS held for more than 5 years. The stock must be in a domestic C corporation with gross assets not exceeding $50 million at the time of issuance and at all times before the issuance.

    For founders receiving restricted stock with an 83(b) election, the QSBS 5-year holding period begins on the date of the 83(b) election — the date the stock is transferred. Without an 83(b) election, the QSBS holding period does not begin until the shares vest (when the Section 83(a) income inclusion occurs). This difference can be critical: a founder who receives restricted stock at incorporation and files an 83(b) election starts the 5-year QSBS clock immediately. If the company is acquired 5 years and 1 day later, the founder qualifies for QSBS exclusion. Without the 83(b) election, if the founder's shares vest over 4 years, the first tranche begins the QSBS clock at the 1-year vesting cliff, and the 5-year clock does not complete until 6 years after formation.

    The 10× basis amplification under Section 1202 is also enhanced by the 83(b) election. The exclusion is the greater of $10 million or 10 times the adjusted basis. With an 83(b) election, the basis is the FMV at transfer (which is also the amount included in income). For a founder who paid $0.001/share for 1 million shares (basis: $1,000), the 10× basis amplification is $10,000 — not meaningful compared to $10 million. But for a founder who purchased at $1/share (basis: $1 million), the 10× amplification is $10 million — doubling the available exclusion to $20 million. Some founders deliberately purchase stock at a slightly higher FMV to increase the 10× basis amplification, trading a small amount of 83(b) income tax for a much larger QSBS exclusion.

    The combined effect for a qualifying scenario: a founder files an 83(b) election on restricted stock at $0.001/share FMV ($1,000 total income, approximately $370 in tax). The company is acquired 6 years later for $50 million. The founder's 1 million shares are worth $50 million. Under Section 1202, the first $10 million of gain is completely excluded from federal income tax. The remaining $40 million is taxed as long-term capital gain at 20% ($8 million) plus NIIT at 3.8% ($1.52 million). Without the 83(b) election, if vesting occurred when FMV was $5/share, the founder would owe ordinary income tax on $5 million of vesting income (~$1.85 million) plus capital gains on the remainder, and the QSBS clock might not have completed. The 83(b) election saved well over $1 million in this scenario.

    The QSBS exclusion is per-issuer, per-taxpayer. Each individual can exclude up to $10 million of gain per qualified company. Married couples who each hold QSBS can each claim the exclusion. Gift and estate planning strategies can multiply the exclusion further — transferring QSBS to family members or trusts before sale allows each recipient to claim their own $10 million exclusion. These strategies are highly fact-specific and require careful planning.

    83(b) election starts the QSBS 5-year clock at transfer (not vesting). QSBS exclusion: up to $10M gain or 10× basis, whichever is greater. Per issuer, per taxpayer. (IRC §1202; IRC §83(b); IRC §1202(a)(1); IRC §1202(b)(1))

    Action steps

    1. 1

      ESPP: enroll, max contribution, and track offering and purchase dates

      If your employer offers an ESPP, enroll at the maximum payroll deduction percentage allowed. The $25,000 annual limit (measured by offering-date FMV) means most employees can contribute significantly. Record the offering date, purchase date, and both the offering-date FMV and purchase-date FMV — you will need these to determine whether a future sale is a qualifying or disqualifying disposition. Most brokers provide Form 3922 with this information, but verify it against your own records. Set calendar reminders for the qualifying disposition dates (2 years from offering, 1 year from purchase).

    2. 2

      ESPP: adjust cost basis on Form 8949 at sale — do not use the 1099-B basis

      When you sell ESPP shares, the 1099-B from your broker will almost certainly show the wrong cost basis (the discounted purchase price rather than the adjusted basis that includes the ordinary income component). Calculate the correct basis: purchase price + ordinary income recognized on the sale. Report the sale on Form 8949 with the correct adjusted basis in column (e) and code B in column (f) to indicate the basis reported to the IRS was incorrect. If you do not make this adjustment, you will pay tax on the ESPP discount twice — once as W-2 income and again as capital gain.

    3. 3

      NSO: understand that exercise creates taxable income + FICA, unlike ISOs

      Before exercising NSOs, calculate the ordinary income (spread × number of shares) and the total tax cost including FICA. Unlike ISOs, there is no AMT deferral mechanism — you owe regular income tax plus Social Security (up to the wage base) and Medicare at exercise. Plan for the withholding gap (22% supplemental withholding vs. your actual marginal rate). If you are at a startup, verify that the company obtained an independent 409A valuation to set the strike price — if the strike price is below FMV at grant, Section 409A penalties apply (20% penalty + interest), which cannot be fixed retroactively.

    4. 4

      83(b): file within 30 days of receiving restricted stock — no exceptions

      If you receive restricted stock (shares subject to vesting) and want to file an 83(b) election, prepare and mail the election to the IRS within 30 calendar days of the stock transfer. Use certified mail with return receipt to prove timely filing. The election statement must include: your name, address, SSN, a description of the property, the transfer date, the FMV, the amount paid, and a statement that you are making the election under Section 83(b). Keep a copy. Attach a copy to your tax return. Your employer does not file this for you. If you miss the 30-day deadline, the election is permanently unavailable for that transfer.

    5. 5

      83(b) + QSBS: verify Section 1202 eligibility and start the 5-year clock

      If you are receiving stock in a C corporation with gross assets under $50 million, the stock may qualify for QSBS exclusion under Section 1202. Filing an 83(b) election starts the 5-year holding period at the transfer date. Verify QSBS eligibility: (1) the corporation must be a domestic C corporation (not S corp, LLC, or partnership), (2) gross assets must not exceed $50 million at issuance, (3) the corporation must be an active business (not investment, real estate, financial, professional services, or similar excluded industries), (4) you must hold the stock for more than 5 years. Keep records of the corporation's gross asset certification and your 83(b) election filing.

    6. 6

      Year-end: reconcile all equity income across W-2, 1099-B, and Form 3922

      At year-end, compile every equity transaction: ESPP purchases and sales, NSO exercises and subsequent sales, and restricted stock vesting or 83(b) elections. Verify that W-2 Box 1 includes all ordinary income from equity (ESPP discount, NSO spread, restricted stock vesting). Verify that Form 3922 (ESPP) and Form 3921 (ISO — if applicable) match your records. Adjust all 1099-B cost bases to the correct adjusted basis on Form 8949. Double-counting errors (paying tax on the same income as both W-2 wages and capital gain) are the most common equity tax mistake and cost thousands of dollars.

    Frequently asked questions

    What happens if I miss the April 15 tax deadline?+
    If you owe tax, the IRS charges two separate penalties: failure to file (5% of unpaid tax per month, max 25% under IRC §6651(a)(1)) and failure to pay (0.5% per month, max 25%). File Form 4868 for an automatic 6-month extension — but the extension only extends the FILING deadline, not the PAYMENT deadline. Interest accrues from April 15 regardless. If you have a clean 3-year history, you may qualify for First Time Abatement (FTA) to waive the failure-to-file penalty.
    Do I need a CPA or can I file my own taxes?+
    Most self-employed people with straightforward Schedule C income can file using tax software (TurboTax, FreeTaxUSA, TaxAct). Consider a CPA or Enrolled Agent (EA) if you have: an S-Corp election, multi-state filing, rental property with cost segregation, your first year of self-employment (to set up correctly), or an IRS notice. EAs are federally licensed and often less expensive than CPAs. The IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program offers free help for incomes under $67,000.
    How do quarterly estimated tax payments work?+
    Self-employed people must pay estimated tax quarterly (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15) if they expect to owe $1,000 or more. The safe harbor under IRC §6654 is paying at least 100% of prior-year tax (110% if AGI exceeded $150,000). Use Form 1040-ES or pay via IRS Direct Pay or EFTPS. Missing payments triggers an underpayment penalty calculated per quarter — even if you pay everything at filing time.
    Should I sell ESPP shares immediately or hold for a qualifying disposition?+
    Immediate sale is often the right choice for risk management. With a 15% discount and lookback, the guaranteed return at purchase is already significant — holding adds stock concentration risk. The tax savings from a qualifying disposition (converting part of the ordinary income to LTCG) are typically modest compared to the risk of holding a single stock for 1-2 years. For a $15 discount on a $100 stock, the qualifying disposition saves roughly $3-4 per share in federal tax — meaningful, but not enough to justify concentrated risk for most employees. If you hold and the stock drops 20%, you have lost more than the tax savings. Many financial advisors recommend selling ESPP shares at purchase and reinvesting in a diversified portfolio.
    What happens if my company's 409A valuation was too low when my NSOs were granted?+
    If the IRS determines that the exercise price was below FMV at grant (meaning the 409A valuation was too low), every option granted at that price is treated as deferred compensation under Section 409A. The consequences are severe: the spread becomes taxable at vesting (not exercise), you owe a 20% penalty tax on top of the ordinary income tax, and premium interest applies from the vesting date. There is no correction program for options already exercised. If options are not yet vested, certain limited corrections (under IRS Notices 2008-113 and 2010-6) may be available, but these are complex and time-sensitive. As an employee, your main protection is ensuring your company uses a reputable 409A valuation firm and updates valuations at least annually or after material events.
    Can I file an 83(b) election on RSUs or stock options?+
    No — at least not in the typical sense. RSUs are a contractual promise to deliver stock in the future; you do not own property at grant, so there is nothing to make an 83(b) election on. For stock options (ISO or NSO), the 83(b) election applies only if you early-exercise the option and receive restricted stock (shares subject to vesting). In that case, you are making the election on the restricted stock received at exercise, not on the option itself. If you exercise an option and receive fully vested shares, no 83(b) election is needed because the shares are not subject to forfeiture. The 83(b) election is relevant only for restricted stock — shares that you own but that are subject to a repurchase right or other vesting condition.
    How does the ESPP lookback provision work?+
    The lookback provision means the purchase price is calculated using the lower of two FMVs: the FMV on the offering date (the start of the offering period) or the FMV on the purchase date (the end). The discount (typically 15%) is applied to whichever FMV is lower. If the stock was $100 on the offering date and $130 on the purchase date, the purchase price is 85% × $100 = $85 — you pay the offering-date price minus the discount, even though the stock is worth $130 at purchase. This creates an immediate $45/share gain ($130 − $85). The lookback essentially gives you the benefit of the stock's appreciation during the offering period, plus the statutory discount. Not all ESPPs include a lookback provision — check your plan document.

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