Equity compensation taxes often surprise tech professionals because company withholding rarely covers the full bill. RSUs are taxed as income at vesting (not sale), ISOs can trigger Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), ESPP shares lose benefits if sold too soon, and moving states mid-vesting can create unexpected liabilities. To avoid traps, calculate your true tax rate, sell systematically to cover obligations, and coordinate with a tax and CFP® professional to manage timing, diversification, and cash flow.
For some tech employees, equity compensation can make up 30–70% of total income. Mismanaging the tax rules can easily cost five or even six figures in surprise bills, penalties, or missed opportunities. With proper planning, you can turn equity into long-term, tax-efficient wealth.
| Equity Type | When Taxed | Risk of Surprise | Planning Opportunity |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSUs (Restricted Stock Units) | Taxed as ordinary income at vesting/settlement. Employers often withhold at the federal supplemental rate (22%, or 37% for >$1M) plus state and payroll taxes. Your actual tax rate can be higher or lower | Withholding shortfalls (i.e. $5K+ per year) | Sell 35–50% at vesting to cover taxes |
| ISOs (Incentive Stock Options) | Exercise not taxed under regular rules, but spread may trigger AMT (26–28%) | Large AMT bills ($20K+) on illiquid stock | Spread exercises over years; model AMT |
| NQSOs (Non-Qualified Stock Options) | Taxed as income at exercise; later gains taxed as capital gains | Exercise spikes income and tax bracket | Time exercises with low-income years |
| ESPPs (Employee Stock Purchase Plans) | Discount taxed; favorable rates require 2 yrs from grant + 1 yr from purchase | Selling early converts to ordinary income | Track holding dates; plan partial sales |
The trap: Many think RSUs are like regular stock. They’re not. Taxes hit at vesting, even if you don’t sell.
Example: Marcus in California vested $80K in RSUs. Withholding covered ~28%, but his true rate was 35%. Result: a $5,400 bill at filing.
Fix:
The trap: After learning taxes hit at vesting, some sell 100% immediately.
Example: Sarah sold $120K of RSUs in one year, pushing her into the 32% bracket and costing an extra $6,400 in taxes.
Fix:
The trap: ISOs feel tax-free at exercise — until AMT hits.
Example: David exercised ISOs with a $150K spread. Regular tax: $0. AMT owed: $42K on illiquid stock.
Fix:
The trap: Selling stock at a loss while new RSUs or ESPP shares arrive can void your tax benefit. Check your vesting calendar before loss harvesting company stock. If bonus/award shares (including RSUs when delivered) arrive within ±30 days, wash-sale rules can disallow the loss—even if your broker doesn’t report it automatically.
Example: Jennifer harvested a $10K loss, but new RSUs vested within 30 days. Loss was disallowed.
Fix:
The trap: Moving states doesn’t always free you from old obligations.
Example: Alex worked in California (13.3% tax), then moved to Texas. California still taxed equity linked to his California-based work period. Surprise bill: $15K+.
Fix:
The trap: Selling ESPP shares too early converts tax-favored gains into ordinary income.
Example: Tom sold after 6 months, losing ~$1,200 in potential savings.
Fix:
The trap: Holding stock forever to avoid taxes often destroys more wealth than it saves.
Example: Lisa held $400K in company stock. A 40% decline wiped out $160K — far more than the $60K tax she was trying to avoid.
Proof: Multiple studies show most individual stocks underperform broad indexes over time—another reason to diversify concentrated company stock
Fix:
Tech professional in California (RSUs + ISOs)- Emily earns $250K salary + $200K RSUs annually at a Bay Area startup. By selling 50% of each vest, she covers her tax bills and reduces stock risk. She exercises ISOs gradually each year to avoid AMT spikes, guided by a CFP® professional and CPA.
Dual-income family relocating (RSUs + ESPP)- Mark and Jenna earn $400K combined, with RSUs vesting while living in California. They’re moving to Texas. By timing their exercises and documenting work history, they limit California’s tax reach and optimize ESPP holdings for long-term gains.Emily earns $250K salary + $200K RSUs annually at a Bay Area startup. By selling 50% of each vest, she covers her tax bills and reduces stock risk. She exercises ISOs gradually each year to avoid AMT spikes, guided by a CFP® professional and CPA.
*All examples are for illustrative purposes only and do not depict actual client scenarios.
Don’t let taxes wipe out the value of your hard-earned equity. Domain Money’s flat-fee CFP® professionals specialize in RSU, ISO, and ESPP planning. We’ll build a personalized tax and wealth strategy — no hidden fees, no product sales.
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When do I owe taxes on RSUs — at vesting or at sale?
At vesting. The full market value is taxed as ordinary income, even if you hold the shares.
Can I avoid AMT on ISO exercises?
Not entirely. But you can minimize it by spreading exercises across years, using AMT calculators, and exercising in lower-income years.
What’s the best RSU selling strategy?
Many sell 40–60% immediately to cover taxes and diversify, then hold the rest for long-term gains. The right mix depends on your goals, cash flow, risk appetite, and tax bracket.
How do state taxes affect equity compensation?
Top state income tax rates reach 13.3% in California; several states levy no individual income tax (e.g., AK, FL, NV, SD, TN, TX, WA, WY, NH)
Do I need a professional if my equity comp is under $100K per year?
Probably not — simple RSU cases can often be handled with calculators. Above $100K or with ISOs, ESPPs, or relocations, professional guidance can prevent costly mistakes.
David Jackson, CFP®, is a Senior Financial Planner at Domain Money with 15+ years of experience helping professionals navigate equity compensation, retirement, and tax strategies. He’s guided hundreds of clients through RSU and stock option planning, home purchases, and long-term wealth building. David believes money should empower—not intimidate—and brings an approachable, coaching style to every plan.
Domain Money is a flat-fee financial planning firm built for high-earning professionals who want to make smarter money moves with confidence. Our CFP® professionals create personalized, integrated strategies that cover taxes, investments, retirement, real estate, equity compensation, insurance, and more—all for one transparent membership fee. Unlike traditional advisors who charge based on assets, we provide unbiased advice, actionable recommendations, and ongoing guidance designed to evolve with your life.
This material has been prepared for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on for, investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Please consult your own financial advisor or tax professional before making any decisions. Domain Money does not provide investment advisory services or sell financial products. Domain Money is a Registered Investment Advisor with the SEC.