Timothy A. Farmer and Gregory G. Geisler
NEW! You can build your employee stock purchase plan into your long-range savings and retirement strategy. This article compares buying company stock at a discount through your ESPP to putting the same money into your 401(k) or another retirement plan.
Bruce Brumberg
Employee stock purchase plans (ESPPs) are popular and prevalent at most public companies. However, the structure of these plans is changing. These modifications may affect your decision to participate in your ESPP and its place in your financial planning.
The myStockOptions.com Tax Team
UPDATED! Learn how to report your sales of company stock on Schedule D of IRS Form 1040. Our comprehensive guide to Schedule D reporting covers sales of stock from nonqualified stock options, incentive stock options, restricted stock, restricted stock units, employee stock purchase plans, and stock appreciation rights.
Alisa Baker
In Part 4 we consider the taxation of employee stock purchase plans (ESPPs) that are not qualified under Section 423, and the tax issues of down markets, death, and withholding.
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Assuming this is still a tax-qualified ESPP, the tax treatment stays the same, though it gets even more confusing...
You may have both ordinary income and capital gain when you meet the holding-period requirements (this is a qualifying disposition under the tax code). The answer depends on whether...
If you sell or otherwise dispose of the stock without satisfying the two...
Nothing in connection with an ESPP purchase is reflected on your Form W-2 unless...
If you sell ESPP shares in a qualifying disposition, you still...
With a tax-qualified ESPP, nothing appears on your W-2 until you sell the shares. In that year, income is reported in the following boxes of your W-2...
The gain from your ESPP purchase is totaled on the W-2 with other income in the following boxes...
If you sell ESPP shares in a qualifying disposition, you still realize ordinary income in the year of sale and report it on...
You report the sale for your capital gain or loss, regardless of...
Whether you immediately sell the stock or hold the stock and later sell it, you need to complete a Schedule D ("Capital Gains and Losses") for the year of the sale and file it with your Form 1040 federal income-tax return. You will need to know...
Let's first review the tax rules and the W-2 reporting. The tax basis for...
Yes, when the market price of the stock has dropped after purchase and you make a disqualifying disposition of the shares...
Assuming you have no power to refuse or...
A disqualifying disposition occurs if you sell, transfer, exchange, gift, or donate the stock that you acquired without...
You can gift shares purchased from a qualified Section 423 ESPP after the holding requirements are satisfied without disqualifying consequences. However, you do not completely escape taxation...
If you sell company shares for a loss and buy more company shares within 30 calendar days before or after the loss transaction, the federal tax code will...
The tax treatment of sales by your estate depends on whether you or the estate purchased the shares. Death is considered a qualifying disposition of the shares, regardless of how long you have held the shares. If you purchase the stock but die before its disposition, you have...
A number of tax law provisions and interpretations that may affect your stock grants occur in the wide-ranging American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (AJCA); the final regulations on deferred compensation under Section 409A (issued on April 10, 2007), which adopt the...
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