Model grants, vesting, taxes, and expected exits clearly. See dilution, break even, and net value. Use realistic assumptions before accepting equity in compensation offers.
The page keeps a single-column flow, while the calculator fields use a responsive 3-column, 2-column, and 1-column arrangement.
| Scenario | Granted | Vested % | Strike price | Exit price | Dilution % | Net proceeds | Expected present value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Offer A | 15,000 | 25% | $1.50 | $14.00 | 12% | $32,295.00 | $12,314.43 |
| Offer B | 30,000 | 50% | $4.00 | $22.00 | 18% | $157,680.00 | $45,041.73 |
| Offer C | 8,000 | 100% | $0.80 | $7.50 | 10% | $38,540.00 | $20,268.97 |
These examples show how outcomes can change when strike price, dilution, tax rates, and time to liquidity change together.
This model assumes you exercise now, hold until exit, and sell then. Actual tax treatment can differ by country, plan type, and holding period.
It estimates exercise cost, current spread, expected exit proceeds, taxes, dilution impact, ownership percentage, probability-weighted value, and discounted present value for your stock options.
Current FMV helps estimate exercise spread and possible tax exposure today. Future exit price helps estimate what those exercised options could be worth at liquidity.
Dilution reduces your effective future ownership and per-share economics. It usually happens when new shares are issued in later funding rounds or other equity events.
If exercise cost and estimated taxes are high relative to the exit value, the model can show a loss. That highlights exercise risk before liquidity.
Not always. Immediate exercise may increase tax exposure and cash risk. This calculator helps compare the tradeoff, but personal circumstances still matter.
Use reasonable planning estimates for your jurisdiction and option type. If unsure, test several rates to see how sensitive your result is.
They convert a hopeful future payout into a more realistic present-day value. Startups are risky, and money received later is worth less today.
No. It is a planning calculator for career and compensation analysis. Final exercise decisions should be reviewed with qualified tax or legal professionals.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.