Individual Tax · Tech Professionals

Software Engineer Tax Planning

A vest is not the same as a payday. Between RSUs taxed the moment they vest, ISO exercises that trigger AMT, and ESPP discounts the IRS treats as income, a strong year at a tech company can quietly turn into a tax problem. Good software engineer tax planning starts before the vest, not at filing, and this page shows you how to keep more of what you earn.

Schedule A Meeting


100% confidential · No spam

The Numbers First

How Smart Timing Lowers the Tax Bill

The 22% flat rate your employer withholds rarely matches what a high earner actually owes. Here is the gap on a single $200,000 vest, and what closing it looks like.
Default Withholding Only
April Balance Due

$26,000

Your employer withholds the flat 22% supplemental rate on the vest. At a 35% marginal bracket, that leaves roughly $26,000 unpaid, plus a possible underpayment penalty waiting in April.
With Planning
April Balance Due

$0

Quarterly estimates, bracket smoothing, and a proactive stock options tax strategy that times exercises across calendar years remove the surprise entirely and trim the true liability.
Metric Without Planning With Planning
Total equity income $200,000 $200,000
Withheld at vest (22%) $44,000 $44,000
True federal liability $70,000 $58,000
April shortfall $26,000 $0
Underpayment penalty risk Likely None
Liability Reduced By
$12,000 + penalty avoided
Balance Due = (Equity Income × Marginal Rate) − Payments Already Made. Figures are illustrative.
The CPA View

Four Costly Equity Tax Mistakes

These are the most common equity compensation missteps we see most often. Each one is avoidable with a plan in place before the transaction, not after.

 
⚠ The Withholding Gap

22% Is Not Your Real Rate

Employers withhold RSU income at the flat 22% supplemental rate. High earners sit in the 32% to 37% brackets, so the shortfall lands as a balance due, often with a penalty attached.
⚠ The AMT Trap

Exercising and Holding ISOs

Exercise incentive stock options and hold the shares, and the bargain element counts toward alternative minimum tax, even though you have sold nothing and received no cash.
⚠ Single-Stock Concentration

Selling to Diversify, Unplanned

Dumping concentrated employer stock in one move creates large capital gains with nothing to offset them. Staged sales and loss harvesting soften the hit considerably.
⚠ The ESPP Disqualifying Disposition

Selling Your Discount Too Early

Sell ESPP shares before the holding rules are met and the discount converts from favorable capital gain to ordinary income, raising your rate on the entire benefit.
Readiness

Equity Tax Readiness Checklist

Run through these before your next vest or exercise window. If any item is unclear, it is worth a conversation before the transaction settles.
5 / 5 to be confident
Vest schedule mapped
Every RSU vest date and its expected income are projected into your annual bracket.
ISO vs NSO identified

You know which grants are incentive options and which are non-qualified, since they tax very differently.

AMT exposure modeled
Any planned ISO exercise is tested against the alternative minimum tax before you pull the trigger.
ESPP holding dates tracked
Purchase and offering dates are logged so you avoid an accidental disqualifying disposition.
Estimated payments scheduled
Quarterly estimates cover the gap the flat withholding leaves behind, keeping penalties off the table.
Quick Reference
Award type Taxed at Watch for
RSU Vest Withholding shortfall
ISO Exercise / sale AMT, qualifying hold
NSO Exercise Ordinary income spread
ESPP Sale Disqualifying disposition

Build a Tax Plan Before the Next Vest

A short review now can save thousands later. We will map your grants, model the tax, and build a plan around your vesting calendar.

Expert FAQs

How are software engineers taxed on RSUs?

RSUs are taxed as ordinary income at the moment they vest, based on the share price that day. That value is added to your wages and reported on your W-2. Any further change in price after vesting is treated as a capital gain or loss when you eventually sell.

Employers withhold federal tax on equity at a flat 22% supplemental rate. Most high earners sit in a higher bracket, so that flat rate under-collects, and the difference becomes a balance due at filing, sometimes with an underpayment penalty.

It depends on your AMT exposure, your cash position, and your view of the company. Exercising and holding starts the clock toward long-term treatment but can create an AMT bill on paper gains. Modeling it before year end is the safest approach.

For restricted stock or early-exercised options, an 83(b) election lets you pay tax on the value at grant rather than at vesting. When the current value is low and you expect growth, it can shift future appreciation into capital gains. The election must be filed within 30 days of receiving the stock.

Hold the shares long enough to meet both the offering-period and purchase-date requirements before selling. Meeting them keeps more of your gain in the lower capital-gains category instead of ordinary income.

Disclaimer: This is not tax advice, and it is recommended to consult a tax professional, as every tax situation is unique.