Federal Law Framework: The Core Distinctions

At the federal level, taxing stock options depends primarily on the type of option granted. The two main categories are incentive stock options (ISOs) under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code and nonqualified stock options (NSOs) governed by Section 83 of the Code.

📜 Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) – Section 422

ISOs are “statutory” options that allow employees to defer taxation until the shares acquired are sold, provided certain conditions are met. Key requirements include:

  • Holding Periods – Shares must be held for more than one year from the date of exercise and more than two years from the date the option was granted.
  • **100,000 (determined at the time of grant). Any excess is treated as an NSO.
  • Employment Requirement – The option holder must be employed by the granting company (or a parent/subsidiary) from the date the option is granted until three months before exercise.

When executed properly, an ISO exercise triggers no regular tax liability at the time of exercise. Instead, the holder pays capital gains tax (or recognizes a capital loss) only when the shares are ultimately sold. If the holding periods are not satisfied (a “disqualifying disposition”), the bargain element (the spread between the exercise price and the fair market value on the exercise date) becomes ordinary income in the year of sale.

⚖️ Nonqualified Stock Options (NSOs) – Section 83

NSOs are simpler but generally less tax‑favorable. Under Section 83 and Treasury Regulation §1.83‑7, an NSO holder recognizes ordinary income at exercise equal to the difference between the option’s exercise price and the fair market value of the stock on the exercise date. This ordinary income is reported on Form W‑2 and is subject to federal income, Social Security, and Medicare (FICA) withholding. The employer must also withhold applicable FUTA taxes.

The subsequent sale of the shares generates capital gain or loss equal to the difference between the selling price and the fair market value of the shares on the exercise date (the holder’s basis in the shares).

If the option has a readily ascertainable fair market value at grant—for example, if the option itself is publicly traded—Section 83(a) would apply at grant rather than at exercise. However, for most compensatory options, the option does not have a readily ascertainable value, so taxation is deferred until exercise. Treasury Regulation §1.83‑7(a).


Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) – Section 1202

For stock options issued by smaller, fast‑growing companies, Section 1202 of the Code offers a potentially powerful exclusion from capital gains tax.

🔍 Basic Eligibility

Section 1202 allows non‑corporate taxpayers to exclude a percentage of the gain from the sale or exchange of qualified small business stock (QSBS) that is held for more than five years (or, under recently enacted changes, for shorter periods). The stock generally must be stock of a domestic C corporation whose aggregate gross assets at all times before and immediately after issuance do not exceed 75 million under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025).

📈 Exclusion Percentages

Stock Acquisition DateHolding PeriodMaximum Exclusion
Before February 18, 2009> 5 years50%
February 18, 2009 – September 27, 2010> 5 years75%
September 28, 2010 – July 4, 2025> 5 years100%
On or after July 5, 2025> 3 years50%
On or after July 5, 2025> 4 years75%
On or after July 5, 2025> 5 years100%

The exclusion is also subject to a per‑issuer cap: the greater of **10 million by the OBBBA) or 10 times the taxpayer’s adjusted basis in the stock. This limitation is applied on a cumulative basis for each issuer.

⚠️ Prohibited Trades or Businesses. Stock of a corporation that derives more than 50% of its gross income from the performance of services in health, law, accounting, consulting, financial services, investment services, or trading in securities or commodities does not qualify as QSBS. See Section 1202(e)(3)(A) and (e)(4)(A).


Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) – The ISO Trap

One of the most common pitfalls for ISO holders is the alternative minimum tax (AMT).

💡 How AMT Works with ISOs

Under the regular tax system, no income is recognized when an ISO is exercised. However, for AMT purposes, the bargain element (the difference between the stock’s fair market value and the exercise price) is included in alternative minimum taxable income (AMTI) for the year of exercise, unless the shares are sold in that same calendar year.

📊 Key AMT Numbers for 2026

  • AMT Exemption Amounts:
    – Single filers: 140,200
  • Phase‑out Thresholds:
    – Single filers: AMTI over 680,350
    – Joint filers: AMTI over 1,280,400
  • AMT Tax Rates: 26% on AMTI up to 239,100 for joint filers) and 28% on AMTI above that amount.

If the AMT calculation results in a liability greater than your regular tax liability, you pay the higher amount. Any excess AMT paid can be carried forward as an AMT credit to offset regular tax in future years when the AMT is not owed.

🛠️ Six Strategies to Manage or Avoid AMT

  1. Exercise Early in the Year – This gives you more time to sell the shares later in the year if the stock price drops, potentially reducing or eliminating the AMT exposure.
  2. Exercise Late in the Year – If you expect the stock price to remain stable, late‑year exercise may allow you to sell shares in the following year without triggering a disqualifying disposition.
  3. Exercise Unvested Options (Early Exercise) – Under Treasury Regulation §1.83‑2(a), a Section 83(b) election can be made to include the bargain element in gross income at the time of exercise, potentially avoiding AMT on future appreciation.
  4. Plan Around the AMT Exemption and Phase‑outs – Carefully time the exercise to stay below the phase‑out thresholds.
  5. Accelerate AMT Credits – If you paid AMT in a prior year, consider triggering regular tax liability in a later year (e.g., by selling long‑term capital assets) to use up the credit.
  6. High‑Income Exercise – When other income is low, the risk of AMT is smaller.

Important: The OBBBA made the higher AMT exemption amounts permanent but also accelerated the phase‑out to 50 cents per dollar of AMTI above the thresholds (up from 25 cents per dollar before 2026). This means the exemption disappears much faster for high‑income taxpayers.


Charitable Giving of Appreciated Stock Options

Donating appreciated stock – including shares acquired through the exercise of stock options – can be a tax‑smart way to support charity while avoiding capital gains tax.

🎁 Two‑Prong Tax Benefit

  • Avoid Capital Gains Tax – When you donate shares held for more than one year directly to a qualified charity (including a donor‑advised fund that is a Section 501(c)(3) public charity), you do not realize capital gain on the appreciation.
  • Fair Market Value Deduction – You may deduct the full fair market value of the donated shares, subject to an annual limitation of 30% of your adjusted gross income (AGI). Any excess deduction can be carried forward for up to five years.

✅ Eligible Awards Types

Not all equity awards are eligible for donation. The general rule is that the underlying shares must be held for more than one year from the date the shares are acquired:

Award TypeCan it be donated?
Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) after vesting and > 1 year from vesting date✅ Yes
Restricted Stock Awards (RSAs) after vesting and > 1 year from vesting date✅ Yes
Stock received upon NSO exercise held > 1 year from exercise date✅ Yes
Stock received upon ISO exercise held > 1 year from exercise and > 2 years from grant date✅ Yes
The option itself (unexercised)❌ No – generally non‑transferable

Example: You exercise a nonqualified stock option and pay 200,000. You hold the shares for 14 months and then donate them to a donor‑advised fund. You avoid capital gains tax on the 200,000 (subject to AGI limits).


Wash Sale Rule – Losses Can Be Disallowed

The wash sale rule (Section 1091 of the Code) prevents taxpayers from claiming a loss on the sale of a security if they acquire a “substantially identical” security within the 61‑day period that begins 30 days before the sale and ends 30 days after the sale.

🔁 What Prohibitions?

  • Selling shares of a company at a loss and then repurchasing the same stock or substantially identical securities (including call options, put options, and warrants) within the 30‑day window.
  • Losing the ability to deduct the loss in the current year – the disallowed loss is added to the basis of the replacement shares and is realized only when those replacement shares are eventually sold.

Practical Tip: If you plan to harvest losses, ensure that you do not buy or sell any call options (or the underlying stock) within the wash‑sale window.


Employment Tax Withholding

Understanding withholding obligations is critical for both employees and employers.

  • Nonqualified Stock Options (NSOs) – When an NSO is exercised, the bargain element is considered wages subject to federal income tax withholding, Social Security (FICA) tax, and Medicare tax. Income tax withholding is required at the time of exercise. Employers must report the income in Boxes 1, 3 (up to the Social Security wage base), 5, and 12 (using Code V) on Form W‑2.
  • Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) – Generally no income tax or FICA/FUTA withholding applies at exercise, even if the shares are later sold in a disqualifying disposition. The prohibition on withholding for disqualifying dispositions is codified in Section 421(b) (last sentence).

Employers have several common strategies to satisfy withholding obligations:

  1. Sell‑to‑Cover – A broker sells enough shares to generate cash for the taxes.
  2. Net Share Issuance – The employer withholds a portion of the shares.
  3. Cash Payment by Employee – The employee pays the taxes in cash (rarely used for large tax liabilities).

🌍 State Tax Considerations

State income taxation of stock options can be more complex than federal taxation because each state has its own rules. Below are the key principles and notable state variations.

🗺️ Residency vs. Sourcing Rules

  • Resident States – Resident taxpayers are generally taxed on all worldwide income, including compensation from stock options.
  • Nonresident States – Many states use a sourcing rule: a nonresident owes tax on compensation for services performed in the state, including the portion of option gain attributable to the time spent working in the state between the grant date and the exercise date (or the vesting date for restricted stock).

📍 State Conformity to Federal Treatment

StateISO TreatmentNSO Treatment
IllinoisFollows federal – no state tax due at exercise (Income Tax Act, 35 ILCS 5/101 et seq.)Taxable at exercise; the bargain element is treated as Illinois‑source income
CaliforniaFollows federal – no state tax due at exercise (Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 17502)Taxable at exercise; the bargain element is treated as California‑source income
TexasNo state income taxNo state income tax
WashingtonCapital gains tax (7% above $250,000 of capital gains) applies to ISO sales; plus a new 6.5% (rising to 9.9%) income tax scheduled for 2028Ordinary income from NSO exercise may be subject to the new income tax

📦 Multistate Apportionment

When an employee works in one state and exercises options in another, the income must be apportioned among the states. The typical formula is based on days physically worked in each state during the award’s earning period (from grant to exercise).

Example: An employee receives an NSO grant in New York, works in New York for two years, then moves to Florida and works there for two more years before exercising the option. New York may tax 50% of the bargain element (2 years / 4 years), while Florida (which has no income tax) would tax nothing.

🚨 Case Study – State Tax Trap

In Kansler v. Mississippi Department of Revenue, 2018‑CA‑00120‑SCT (Miss. 2019). Mississippi’s three‑year statute of limitations barred the taxpayers from amending their returns and claiming a credit for taxes paid to another state. The key lesson: always file amended returns promptly when a second state’s audit is completed.


📆 Recent Legislative and Case‑Law Developments

Tax laws affecting stock options have changed significantly in the last two years.

📜 One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) – Signed July 4, 2025

  • QSBS Expansion – Creation of tiered gain exclusion for stock issued after July 4, 2025 (see table above).
  • AMT Exemption – Permanently made the higher AMT exemption amounts, but accelerated the phase‑out (50% per dollar of AMTI above the threshold).
  • Corporate Governance – The OBBBA also made certain corporate governance changes that affect equity award administration, but the core tax provisions are summarized above.

🚔 Insider Trading Risks (Securities Law)

While primarily securities law, insider trading can result in criminal penalties and disgorgement of all profits, including any tax benefits.

Recent case: In SEC v. Qsar, the SEC obtained a final judgment against several individuals for trading on material nonpublic information prior to a merger. The SEC required disgorgement of all profits plus prejudgment interest.

Takeaway: Never trade (or recommend trading) your company’s stock options when you possess material nonpublic information. This includes exercising options or selling acquired shares.

⚖️ Case Law Developments

  • Racine v. Commissioner (2007) – Clarified when a transfer of property occurs under Section 83 for NSOs: generally upon exercise, not grant, unless the option has a readily ascertainable fair market value.
  • Strom v. United States (2011) – Reaffirmed that the bargain element of an NSO is taxed as ordinary income at exercise, applying Section 83(a) and Treasury Regulation §1.83‑7(a).

Practical Tax‑Planning Strategies Checklist

✅ 1. Determine Option Type. Verify whether your option is an ISO or an NSO. Check your award agreement.
✅ 2. Compute the Bargain Element. For NSOs, plan for ordinary income tax and employment withholding.
✅ 3. Model AMT Exposure. If you have ISOs, run both regular tax and AMT calculations before exercising.
✅ 4. Consider a Disqualifying Disposition. If the stock price is near the exercise price, selling the shares in the same year – a “disqualifying disposition” – may eliminate AMT entirely.
✅ 5. Hold for Long‑Term Capital Gains. For ISOs, holding for more than one year after exercise and more than two years after grant converts all gain to long‑term capital gain.
✅ 6. Use Charitable Giving. Donate highly appreciated shares (held for > 1 year) to a donor‑advised fund to avoid capital gains tax and claim a fair‑market‑value deduction.
✅ 7. Avoid the Wash Sale Rule. Do not repurchase substantially identical stock or options within 30 days of a loss sale.
✅ 8. Manage State Taxes. Consider the allocation of income among states. If you move, consult state‑specific sourcing rules.
✅ 9. Review 1202 Eligibility. If your company is a C corporation with gross assets under $75 million, your stock may qualify for the QSBS exclusion.
✅ 10. Keep Records. Maintain statements showing grant date, exercise date, strike price, fair market values, and holding periods.


Federal and State Law References

Federal Statutes

  • 26 U.S.C. § 421 (“General rules” for statutory stock options)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 422 (“Incentive stock options”)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 423 (“Employee stock purchase plans”)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 83 (“Property transferred in connection with performance of services”)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 1202 (“Partial exclusion for gain from certain small business stock”)
  • 26 U.S.C. § 1091 (“Wash sales of stock or securities”)

Regulations

  • Treas. Reg. §1.421‑1 – Defines statutory options (ISOs and ESPP options)
  • Treas. Reg. §1.422‑4 – $100,000 annual limitation for ISOs
  • Treas. Reg. §1.83‑7 – Taxation of nonqualified stock options
  • Treas. Reg. §1.83‑3(a)(2) – Transfer of property occurs when beneficial ownership is acquired
  • Treas. Reg. §1.1091‑2 – Basis of stock or securities acquired in wash sales

Case Law

  • Racine v. Commissioner – T.C. Memo 2007‑1 (transfer of property under Section 83)
  • Strom v. United States – 619 F.3d 249 (3d Cir. 2011) (NSO taxation at exercise)
  • Pagel, Inc. v. Commissioner – 905 F.2d 1190 (8th Cir. 1990) (option with no readily ascertainable value)
  • Hann v. United States – 2022 WL 365592 (Fed. Cl. Feb. 4, 2022) (cashless exercise and capital loss treatment)
  • Kansler v. Mississippi Department of Revenue – 2018‑CA‑00120‑SCT (Miss. 2019) (state statute of limitations for refund claims)

State Laws Examples

  • Illinois Income Tax Act – Generally conforms to federal treatment for ISOs (no state tax at exercise); NSO bargain element treated as Illinois‑source income.
  • California Revenue & Taxation Code §17502 – ISO treatment follows federal; NSOs taxed at exercise.
  • Washington State Capital Gains Tax – Chapter 82.87 RCW (7% tax on long‑term capital gains exceeding $250,000) applies to ISO sales; new income tax (6.5% rising to 9.9%) scheduled for 2028.

📋 Disclosure: Law Changes – Contact Alan Goldstein

⚠️ IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:
This web post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Tax laws, regulations, and judicial decisions are subject to frequent change by Congress, the Treasury Department, the IRS, state legislatures, and the courts. This information is current as of May 10, 2026, but may become outdated.

You should not rely on this post as a substitute for professional advice tailored to your specific situation. Penalties for noncompliance with tax laws can be severe, including interest, penalties, and criminal prosecution.

📞 For personalized guidance, questions, or to schedule a consultation, contact: Alan Goldstein

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