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Non-qualified stock option

 
Investment Dictionary: Non-Qualified Stock Option - NSO
 

A type of employee stock option where you pay ordinary income tax on the difference between the grant price and the price at which you exercise the option.

Investopedia Says:
NSOs are simpler and more common than incentive stock options (ISOs).

They're called non-qualified stock options because they don't meet all of the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code to be qualified as ISOs.

Related Links:
Learn the different accounting and valuation treatments of ESOs, and discover the best ways to incorporate these techniques into your analysis of stock. Accounting and Valuing ESOs
Learn the good, the bad and the ugly sides of this type of payout. The Controversy Over Option Compensations
Read up on the debate over whether or not to expense options. The Controversy Over Option Expensing


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Wikipedia: Non-qualified stock option
 

Non-qualified stock options are stock options which do not qualify for the special treatment accorded to incentive stock options.

Incentive stock options are only available for employees and other restrictions apply for them. For regular tax purposes, incentive stock options have the advantage that no income is reported when the option is exercised and, if certain requirements are met, the entire gain when the stock is sold is taxed as long-term capital gains.

In contrast, non-qualified stock options result in additional taxable income to the recipient at the time that they are exercised, the amount being the difference between the exercise price and the market value on that date.

Non-qualified stock options are frequently preferred by employers because the issuer is allowed to take a tax deduction equal to the amount the recipient is required to include in his or her income.

If they have deferred vesting, then taxpayers must comply with special rules for all types of deferred compensation Congress enacted in 2004 in the wake of the Enron scandal known as Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.

References

  • U.S. Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. ยง 83
  • U.S. Treasury Regulation section 1.83-7

 
 

 

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