Free ISO vs NSO stock options tax calculator. Estimate income tax, AMT, and capital gains on exercising and selling incentive or non-qualified stock options.
The Stock Options Tax Calculator estimates the tax impact of exercising and selling Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) and Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs). ISOs and NSOs are taxed very differently — understanding these differences is crucial for minimizing your tax bill.
NSOs are taxed as ordinary income at exercise (spread = FMV − strike price). ISOs have no regular income tax at exercise, but the spread triggers Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). If you hold ISOs for 1+ year after exercise and 2+ years after grant, gains are taxed as long-term capital gains.
Enter your option details to compare the tax consequences of ISOs vs. NSOs and optimize your exercise and selling strategy. The tax treatment differs dramatically between ISOs and NSOs. NSOs are taxed as ordinary income at exercise, while ISOs receive preferential capital gains treatment if specific holding requirements are met. However, ISOs can trigger the Alternative Minimum Tax, adding complexity that catches many employees off guard. This calculator models both scenarios and shows the impact of different exercise and sale timing strategies on your total tax liability.
Stock options can represent significant wealth but also trigger complex tax obligations. This calculator helps you model ISO vs. NSO taxation, AMT exposure, and the impact of holding periods so you can time exercises and sales for optimal tax outcomes. The difference between a well-timed and poorly-timed option exercise can be tens of thousands of dollars.
NSO at Exercise: Ordinary Income = (FMV − Strike) × Shares ISO at Exercise: AMT Preference = (FMV − Strike) × Shares (no regular tax) Sale: Capital Gain = (Sale Price − Basis) × Shares ISO Basis: Strike (if qualifying); FMV at exercise (if disqualifying) NSO Basis: FMV at exercise
Result: NSO tax at exercise: $12,800 | Total tax: $12,800
Exercising 1,000 NSOs with $10 strike when FMV is $50 creates $40,000 in ordinary income ($40 spread × 1,000). At a 32% marginal rate, that's $12,800 in income tax. If sold immediately at $50, no capital gain. If ISOs were used instead, no regular tax at exercise but $40,000 AMT preference item.
The key difference is timing. NSOs are taxed at exercise, ISOs potentially at sale. With NSOs, you know your tax immediately. With ISOs, your tax depends on when and how you sell. A qualifying ISO disposition can save 15-20 percentage points vs. ordinary income rates.
Many employees exercise large ISO grants when the spread is high, triggering unexpected AMT bills. The 2000-era tech bubble saw employees owing millions in AMT on paper gains that later evaporated. Exercise ISOs strategically — spread exercises across years to stay below the AMT threshold.
Some companies allow early exercise of unvested options. Filing an 83(b) election within 30 days lets you start the capital gains holding period immediately and potentially minimize AMT. This is most beneficial when the spread is zero or minimal (e.g., at grant or shortly after joining).
ISOs (Incentive Stock Options) receive favorable tax treatment: no regular income tax at exercise, and qualifying dispositions are taxed as long-term capital gains. NSOs (Non-Qualified Stock Options) create ordinary income at exercise equal to the spread. ISOs are only available to employees; NSOs can be granted to anyone.
The spread between FMV and strike price at the time of exercise is an Alternative Minimum Tax preference item. If this spread, combined with your other income and AMT adjustments, pushes your AMT above your regular tax, you'll owe AMT. This can be significant for large ISO exercises.
A qualifying disposition requires holding the shares for at least 1 year after exercise and 2 years after the grant date. If both conditions are met, the entire gain (sale price − strike price) is taxed as long-term capital gains. A disqualifying disposition (selling earlier) taxes the spread as ordinary income.
Yes. AMT paid due to ISO exercise creates an AMT credit carryforward. In future years when your regular tax exceeds AMT, you can use the credit to reduce your regular tax. Selling the ISO shares typically creates this scenario because the disqualifying disposition income increases regular tax.
Same-day exercise and sell (cashless exercise) eliminates market risk and provides immediate cash, but you lose the potential long-term capital gains benefit of ISOs. It's appropriate when you need the cash, can't afford the exercise cost, or believe the stock may decline.
NSO exercises are subject to FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare) because the spread is treated as W-2 wages. ISO exercises are not subject to FICA if the shares are later sold in a qualifying disposition. Disqualifying ISO dispositions do not trigger FICA.