Stock Options (ISO/NSO) Tax Strategy – Washington

Washington’s new 9.9% millionaire income tax (ESSB 6346) takes effect January 1, 2028. A single large ISO exercise or NSO spread can push you over the $1 million threshold. The planning window is open now, but it is closing.

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Logic-First Proof

How ISO Strategy Reduces Your Combined Federal and Washington Tax Exposure

Under IRC rules, NSO income is treated as ordinary compensation at exercise and flows directly into federal AGI, which Washington's ESSB 6346 uses as its starting point. A large NSO exercise after 2027 can trigger both the 37% federal rate and Washington's new 9.9% millionaire tax on every dollar above $1 million. ISOs exercised and held may stay out of federal AGI entirely, keeping you below the threshold. To understand how this works in practice, let us assume a gain of $500,000 in 2028.

Without Tax Strategy

NSO Exercise After 2027 – Ordinary Income Hits Both Federal and Washington Threshold

$234,500

Let us assume the entire $500,000 spread is treated as ordinary income in 2028. At a 37% federal rate plus Washington's 9.9% millionaire tax on the amount above $1 million, a high-earning employee faces combined exposure on every dollar of the spread. No deferral. No planning. Every dollar fully exposed.

With ISO Exercise and Hold Strategy

ISO Hold Before 2028 – Spread Stays Outside Federal AGI and Washington Base Income

$119,000

Let us assume the $500,000 gain qualifies for long-term capital gains treatment at 23.8% after a qualifying disposition, and the ISO exercise-and-hold completed before 2028 keeps the spread outside Washington base income entirely. Total federal tax: approximately $119,000. Washington millionaire tax: $0 on the ISO spread.

Let us assume a gain of $500,000. Washington 9.9% millionaire tax applies to household income above $1 million beginning January 1, 2028.

MetricNSO / Disqualifying Disposition (Post-2027)ISO Qualifying Disposition – Pre-2028 Exercise and Hold
Total Gain at Exercise / Sale$500,000$500,000
Income CharacterOrdinary income (enters federal AGI)Long-term capital gain (ISO hold-and-sell)
Federal Tax Rate Applied37%23.8%
Federal Tax Due$185,000$119,000
Washington Millionaire Tax (9.9%)Applies to spread above $1M thresholdISO spread does not enter WA base income
AMT ExposureNone on spreadPotential AMT in exercise year; no WA add-back

Estimated Combined Federal Savings from ISO Strategy (Pre-2028 Exercise)

$66,000+

Savings = (Spread × Rateord) − (Gain × Ratecap); Washington 9.9% millionaire tax additional exposure excluded from illustration and will vary based on total household income in the exercise year

Advisor Perspective

ISO and NSO Planning Under Washington's Millionaire Tax: What Your Advisor Should Flag

Washington’s ESSB 6346 imposes a 9.9% tax on income above $1 million starting January 1, 2028, using federal AGI as its base. NSO exercises and ISO disqualifying dispositions flow directly into that base. Call your advisor before exercising.

⚠ Pre-2028 Exercise Window

NSO Exercises After 2027 May Trigger Washington's 9.9% Rate on Top of Federal Tax

NSO spreads are ordinary income that flows into federal AGI. Under ESSB 6346, that same income flows into Washington base income. An employee with base salary above $700,000 who exercises a $400,000 NSO spread in 2028 could owe 9.9% Washington tax on the portion above $1 million in addition to the 37% federal rate. Accelerating NSO exercises before January 1, 2028 while Washington has no income tax may eliminate this state-level exposure entirely.

⚠ ISO Exercise and Hold Advantage

Pure ISO Exercise and Hold Does Not Enter Washington Base Income

When you exercise an ISO and hold the shares without selling, no ordinary income is recognized for federal purposes. Because ESSB 6346 starts with federal AGI and the statute contains no provision adding back AMT preference items, a pure ISO exercise and hold should not push you over the $1 million threshold for Washington purposes. This is one of the most significant planning advantages remaining for Washington equity holders before 2028.

⚠ Disqualifying Disposition Trap

Selling ISO Shares Early Converts the Spread to Ordinary Income in Washington Base Income

A disqualifying disposition occurs when you sell ISO shares before meeting both holding period requirements. The spread at exercise becomes ordinary income, enters your federal AGI, and under ESSB 6346 flows directly into Washington taxable income. If total household income exceeds $1 million in that year, the full disqualifying spread above the threshold is subject to Washington's 9.9% rate on top of federal taxes.

⚠ NSO Payroll Tax and Washington Double Exposure

NSO Exercises After 2027 Face FICA, Federal, and Washington Tax on the Same Spread

When you exercise NSOs, the spread is treated as W-2 income subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes in addition to federal income tax. After 2027, Washington's 9.9% millionaire tax applies to that same amount above the $1 million threshold. For executives with large NSO grants, the combined exposure of FICA, 37% federal, and 9.9% Washington on a single exercise event in 2028 or later makes pre-2028 planning an urgent priority.

Eligibility and Requirements

ISO Qualifying Disposition: Full Requirements Checklist

Not every exercise qualifies for favorable capital gains treatment. Under ESSB 6346, meeting ISO requirements takes on added significance: a qualifying disposition keeps the spread outside federal AGI and outside Washington base income, potentially avoiding the 9.9% millionaire tax entirely.

ISO Filing Requirements

5 / 5 Complete

Granted Under a Written Plan Approved by Shareholders

The ISO must be granted under a formal equity incentive plan that has been approved by the company’s shareholders. Options granted outside an approved plan do not qualify as ISOs under IRC Section 422.

Exercise Price Equal to or Above Fair Market Value at Grant

The exercise price must be at least equal to the fair market value of the stock on the grant date. Discounted options do not qualify as ISOs, regardless of the company’s intention.

Employed by the Granting Company Through the Exercise Date

ISOs can only be exercised while you are employed by the granting company or within three months of termination. Post-employment exercises beyond the 90-day window disqualify the option from ISO treatment.

Two-Year Grant Hold and One-Year Post-Exercise Hold

To receive qualifying disposition treatment, you must hold the shares for more than two years from the grant date and more than one year from the exercise date. Both holding periods must be satisfied simultaneously.

Annual Vesting Limit of $100,000

No more than $100,000 worth of ISO options (measured by the exercise price on the grant date) may become exercisable for the first time in any single calendar year. Options exceeding this threshold in a given year are automatically treated as NSOs for that excess amount.

Quick Eligibility Snapshot
RequirementCriteria
Option typeISO only (NSOs do not qualify for capital gains treatment at exercise)
Grant date holdMore than 2 years from grant date
Exercise date holdMore than 1 year from exercise date
Employment requirementEmployed through exercise or within 90-day post-termination window
Annual vesting cap$100,000 or less first exercisable per year
Washington millionaire tax noteISO exercise and hold does not enter WA base income under ESSB 6346; NSO spreads and disqualifying dispositions do. Pre-2028 exercise planning can eliminate state-level exposure above the $1 million threshold.

Confirm Your ISO Strategy Before Washington's 2028 Deadline

If your options meet these requirements and you complete qualifying exercises before January 1, 2028, you may avoid Washington’s new 9.9% millionaire tax on the spread entirely. A single unplanned exercise in 2028 can cost far more than it would have in 2027. Verify before acting.

Expert FAQs

Does ISO exercise and hold protect me from Washington's 9.9% millionaire tax?

ESSB 6346 imposes a 9.9% tax on household income above $1 million starting January 1, 2028, using federal AGI as its base. NSO exercises and ISO disqualifying dispositions produce ordinary income that enters federal AGI and flows into Washington taxable income. A pure ISO exercise and hold does not enter federal AGI and should not push you over the threshold under current statute.

Yes, under current statute. ESSB 6346 starts with federal AGI, and the ISO spread at exercise does not enter federal AGI in a regular tax calculation, so it stays out of Washington base income as long as you hold the shares. Selling in the same year as exercise (a disqualifying disposition) converts the spread to ordinary income and subjects the amount above $1 million to the 9.9% Washington rate.

For most high earners in Washington, yes. An NSO exercise completed before 2028 faces only federal tax on the spread; the same exercise in 2028 or later adds Washington’s 9.9% on any amount above $1 million. The optimal timing depends on your total household income in the exercise year, AMT exposure from any ISO grants, and available liquidity.

AMT does not flow through federal AGI, and ESSB 6346 contains no provision to add back AMT preference items, so the ISO spread does not count toward Washington’s $1 million threshold even if it triggers federal AMT. You can manage AMT exposure by spreading exercises across multiple tax years and modeling your liability in advance. AMT paid is recoverable as a federal credit in future years when your regular tax exceeds your AMT.

The two taxes are distinct but offset each other: ESSB 6346 provides a 100% credit against the millionaire tax for Washington capital gains excise taxes already paid, so in most cases you will not owe both on the same gain. The 7% excise tax applies when you sell ISO shares and recognize a long-term gain above the annual threshold (indexed from $250,000). Careful modeling by year of exercise and year of sale is required to determine your net Washington exposure.

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