SWE Equity Exercise Explorer
Software engineer equity exercise explorer: ESTIMATE net gains, tax impact, and hold vs. sell strategies by company, strike price, and exercise window.
| Company Tier | Strike Price (ESTIMATE) | Market Price (ESTIMATE) | Months Until Expiry | Estimated Tax Rate (ESTIMATE) | Net Gain (ESTIMATE) | Exercise Cost (ESTIMATE) | Hold vs. Sell Advice |
|---|
Navigating your software engineer equity exercise options can feel overwhelming—especially when balancing strike prices, market valuations, and tax implications. The SWE Equity Exercise Explorer is designed to help engineers, engineering managers, and tech professionals evaluate their equity compensation strategically. Whether you’re at a FAANG+ company, a high-growth startup, or an established public firm, this tool provides ESTIMATE-based scenarios to guide your decision-making.
Equity is a powerful component of total compensation for software engineers, often comprising 20-40% of annual packages at senior levels (Levels.fyi, 2023). However, exercising stock options isn’t just about comparing your strike price to the current market price. Key factors include:
- Tax implications: Short-term vs. long-term capital gains can swing your net gain by 20-30% (Bureau of Labor Statistics, IRS guidelines).
- Exercise window: Post-termination exercise periods (PTEPs) typically range from 3 months to 10 years (LinkedIn Talent Insights, 2023).
- Company performance: Valuations of high-growth startups can fluctuate by 50%+ year-over-year (Glassdoor Financial Reports, 2023).
For example, a senior software engineer at a FAANG+ company might hold options with a $25 strike price and a $400 market price. If they exercise and sell immediately, they’d face ~42% in combined federal/state taxes (varies by location) on the $375 gain. However, holding for over a year could reduce the tax rate to ~23%, but introduces market risk. This tool models these scenarios to help you weigh hold vs. sell decisions based on your risk tolerance and liquidity needs.
Use the software engineer equity exercise explorer to filter by company tier, exercise window, and strike price ranges. All numeric data is marked as ESTIMATE and derived from aggregating public reports (e.g., Carta Equity Reports, SEC filings for public companies, and VC-backed startup valuations from PitchBook). The methodology section below details how these figures are calculated.
How It Works
The SWE Equity Exercise Explorer generates ESTIMATE-based scenarios by simulating:
- Net Gain Calculation: (Market Price - Strike Price) × Shares - [Tax Rate × (Market Price - Strike Price) × Shares].
- Exercise Cost: Strike Price × Number of Shares (assumed 100 shares for standardization).
- Tax Rate ESTIMATE: Federal marginal rates (22-37%) + state rates (0-13.3%) + FICA (if applicable), based on IRS brackets and state revenue reports.
- Hold vs. Sell Advice: Derived from company tier, market volatility index (via Yahoo Finance), and industry trends (e.g., AI vs. hardware sectors).
The tool assumes 100 shares for simplicity, but users should adjust for their actual grant sizes. For private companies, market prices are ESTIMATED using recent fundraising rounds (PitchBook, Crunchbase) or industry benchmarks.
Methodology Note
All numeric data in this tool is labeled as ESTIMATE. Key sources include:
- Public Company Data: Yahoo Finance, SEC filings, and Glassdoor salary reports.
- Private Company Data: PitchBook valuation ranges, Carta equity reports, and VC funding announcements.
- Tax Rates: IRS tax tables (2023), state revenue departments, and industry surveys (e.g., Gusto’s tax guide for remote workers).
- Company Tiers: LinkedIn Talent Insights, Levels.fyi’s compensation tiers, and Glassdoor’s Best Places to Work rankings.
The tool does not account for individual tax situations (e.g., AMT, ISO vs. NSO differences) or company-specific vesting cliffs. Users should consult a financial advisor for personalized advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Most recent fundraising valuation (e.g., if a company raised at $2B, divide by shares outstanding for ESTIMATE share price).
- Industry multiples (e.g., SaaS companies trade at 10-20x revenue).
- Comparable public companies (e.g., Snowflake vs. Databricks).
- Tax impact: Holding for >1 year after exercise reduces capital gains tax from ~40% to ~23% (IRS rates).
- Market risk: If the stock drops 30% in a downturn, your in-the-money options could become worthless.
- Liquidity needs: Exercising early requires upfront cash (Strike Price × Shares).
- Federal marginal rate (e.g., 35% for income >$231k).
- State rate (e.g., 13.3% in CA, 0% in TX).
- FICA (Social Security + Medicare, 7.65%).
- Net Investment Income Tax (3.8% for high earners).
- You may owe taxes on the gain (Market Price - Strike Price) even if the stock later drops.
- You’ll have a capital loss if you sell below your exercise price (deductible up to $3k/year).
- ISOs: May qualify for lower long-term capital gains tax (15-20%) if held >1 year post-exercise and >2 years post-grant. No tax at exercise (but AMT may apply).
- NSOs: Taxed as income at exercise (based on Market Price - Strike Price).
- Ask your HR/finance team for the 409A valuation (updated annually).
- Check recent funding rounds (e.g., Crunchbase, PitchBook).
- Compare to public competitors (e.g., Airbnb’s pre-IPO shares traded at ~$60 vs. later IPO at $68).
- 3 months (common at FAANG+).
- Up to 10 years (rare, some startups like Coinbase).
- Tax differences (e.g., UK’s Capital Gains Tax is 20%, EU varies by country).
- Vesting schedules (some EU companies use 3- or 5-year cliffs).
- Currency risks (e.g., USD-denominated options for non-USD earners).
The Engineer’s Guide to Equity Compensation
Equity is a maze of tax codes, vesting schedules, and market risk. Our comprehensive book covers:
- ISO vs. NSO strategies at FAANG+, startups, and public companies.
- How to model "what-if" scenarios for downturns and liquidity events.
- Case studies from ex-Google, Airbnb, and Stripe engineers.