With an ISO, you can:

  1. Exercise your option to purchase the shares and hold them.
  2. Exercise your option to purchase the shares, then sell them any time within the same year.
  3. Exercise your option to purchase the shares and sell them after less than 12 months, but during the following calendar year.

When should I buy ISO?

It is often recommended to exercise ISOs in January in order to give yourself time to amass cash from January to December to pay the AMT the following year. If your sole priority is minimizing AMT, you should sell your shares in the same year as you exercise your options.

How do ISO stock options work?

ISOs are issued on a beginning date, known as the grant date, and then the employee exercises their right to buy the options on the exercise date. Once the options are exercised, the employee has the freedom to either sell the stock immediately or wait for a period of time before doing so.

Are ISOs worth it?

ISOs can be a lucrative long-term compensation benefit, particularly if you work for a company that is growing quickly and has a rising stock price. Because they may be highly valuable, incentive stock options have several components that are worth studying.

What happens when an ISO expires?

If an employee reaches the 10-year expiration date, and they have yet to exercise their vested stock options, they forfeit those options which get absorbed back into the company.

What do you need to know about incentive stock options ( ISOs )?

If you choose to exercise, you usually have two options: pay for the total in cash or do a “same-day sale”—in other words, sell a portion of your shares to cover the cost of exercise. Selling to cover exercise costs is called a “cashless” exercise. It’s less risky because you haven’t invested your own money.

Do you have to sell shares when exercising ISO?

When you exercise ISOs, you don’t have to sell the resulting shares right away. If you do sell right away (for example, to cover the cost of exercise), the shares you sell won’t qualify for the ISO tax advantage.

Do you have to pay taxes on an ISO?

ISOs are a type of stock option that qualifies for special tax treatment. Unlike other types of options, you usually don’t have to pay taxes when you exercise (buy) ISOs. Plus, you may be able to pay a lower tax rate if you meet certain requirements.

What happens if you sell ISO before holding period?

If you happen to sell some of your ISOs before the required holding period, it will be known as a disqualifying disposition. This type of sale will turn some of your gains into regular income.