Maximize your equity compensation with smart ESOP and RSU tax planning strategies.
Grant and vesting don’t trigger any tax at all, that’s the part worth knowing upfront, since it’s the opposite of what a lot of people assume. For ESOPs, tax arrives in two separate stages: at exercise, and again at sale. When you exercise, the difference between the share’s fair market value that day and what you actually paid gets added to your salary as a perquisite and taxed at your slab rate, whether or not you’ve sold a single share. That FMV then becomes your cost of acquisition, so when you eventually sell, capital gains tax applies on the gain from that point, not from your original exercise price.
For a listed company, FMV is the average of the opening and closing price on the exchange on your exercise date. For an unlisted company, it comes from a Category I merchant banker’s valuation, and that valuation can’t be older than 180 days before the exercise date, an expired valuation is a compliance error, not a technicality. Holding period for capital gains purposes runs from the exercise date, not from vesting or grant, and the long-term threshold is 12 months for listed shares, 24 months for unlisted ones.
Exercising options in a private company creates real cash-flow pressure: you owe tax in cash on shares you can’t yet sell. A relief exists for this, but the eligibility bar is narrower than most people assume. DPIIT recognition alone does not qualify you, the employer also needs Section 80-IAC certification from the Inter-Ministerial Board, and only a small fraction of DPIIT-recognised startups actually hold both. Where both conditions are met, TDS on the perquisite can be deferred to the earliest of the employee selling the shares, leaving the company, or a fixed period from the end of the assessment year of allotment, recently extended from 4 to 5 years for shares allotted from April 2026 onward under the new Income Tax Act. The tax rate that applies is locked in from the year of exercise, not the year the deferral actually ends.
Restricted Stock Units don’t have a separate exercise step. The taxable event is vesting, or release of the shares to you, and because RSUs are typically granted at no cost, the full fair market value at that point becomes the perquisite, not just a discount. Sale afterward is taxed as capital gains the same way, gain measured from the FMV at vesting. If your RSUs are shares in a foreign parent company, your Indian employer still has to compute the perquisite and deduct TDS, and you’ll need to disclose the foreign holding in Schedule FA and claim any foreign tax credit through Form 67.
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ESOPs allow the possibility of purchasing shares at a predetermined price whereas RSUs consist of shares that are awarded upon a predetermined time.
They are normally subjected to taxation when they are vested and when they are sold.
Capital gains are taxed on the basis of holding period and at the relevant rates.
Yes, foreign holdings might have to be reported further as per the relevant laws.
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