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Economy09:06 · 51m ago

New Calculator Reveals Actual Taxes on Employee Stock Options and RSUs in Israel

N12Center
Translated & summarized from N12 by baba
The story · English

A new online calculator helps Israeli tech employees accurately estimate the taxes they will pay when selling stock options or Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) received from their employers. Users input the sale value, exercise cost, grant value, type of equity (options or RSUs), company status (private or public), and whether they held the shares for the required two years under Section 102's capital track. The tool separates gains into a capital component taxed at 25% and an income component taxed at the employee's marginal income tax rate, showing net proceeds and effective tax rate.

This calculator is especially useful for those considering selling before the two-year holding period ends, as early sales disqualify the capital gains tax benefits and convert all gains into employment income, potentially taxed at marginal rates up to 47% or 50%. There is also a distinction between private and public companies: in public companies, the stock value at grant is taxed as income even under the capital track, with only gains above that taxed at 25%, requiring users to enter the grant value.

An example illustrates the impact: a private company employee who sold shares worth 400,000 shekels with an exercise cost of 60,000 shekels realized a gain of 340,000 shekels. By meeting the capital track conditions, she paid 25% tax (85,000 shekels) and kept 255,000 shekels net. If taxed as income at a 47% rate, she would have paid nearly 160,000 shekels, saving about 74,800 shekels simply by waiting.

The calculator aims to provide clarity for anyone with employer-granted shares weighing the timing and tax implications of selling. It highlights the significant tax advantages of complying with Section 102's capital track rules and the importance of understanding the tax treatment differences between private and public companies.

Read the original at N12
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