this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2024
452 points (96.3% liked)
Data is Beautiful
1274 readers
155 users here now
Be respectful
founded 6 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
As a CEO id be stupid to get a salary. Dividends and stocks are much better tax-wise. Well maybe id get a smaller salary for the advantages in retirement and tax-free accounts and everything, but not much more than whats needed.
Stock grants are taxed as regular income.
Edit: downvotes from people who have no idea how stock, compensation, or taxes work, apparently.
Rsus have to vest and then they're taxed when they drop to your account.
That is correct. It's the same as paying taxes on each paycheck, not when your salary is promised.
Yeah people don't seem to understand taxes wrt stock at all. RSUs are definitely taxed!
Only thing I can think of is they're thinking of options? Afaik those can be advantageous, tax-wise, because you are taxed when you exercise, not when they're granted or when they vest (this is my understanding
I could be wrong).
Options are basically just a special price you get to pay for stock. There's another concept called "stock appreciation rights" in which shares are granted at a given strike price, and taxation only occurs on the price difference upon exercise (sale).
I thought founders usually get all their shares upon founding the company when it's worth next to nothing. Is that not how it works?
Who was talking about founders?
Founders usually end up in C-suite positions. That sounds like what independantiste was thinking about.
Maybe in Europe
I'm talking about the US, sweetie.
Thank you for the service
Search the Internet for RSU tax liability in the US. It's taxed as supplemental income and is subject to withholding.
Are you thinking of options? That's different
"stock grant" afaik almost always refers to an RSU grant/vest.
I mean, you still have to have some money to survive day to day life.
I wouldn't want my entire income to be based on the company's performance and the whims of the stock market.