The tax on Employee Stock Purchase Plans (ESPP) has two components: the difference between the offering price and the fair market value (FMV) of the stock is treated as employment income and the difference between the FMV and the selling price is treated as capital gains or losses.
For example, let’s say that shares in your employer ABC Inc. was offered to you at a price of $10 on September 15th and on that day, the stock closed at $12. The company beat expectations and when the markets opened for trading the next day, you sold the stock at $13. The $2 benefit ($12 - $10) is treated as employment income and typically taxed at your marginal tax rate and the $1 gained when selling the stock is treated as capital gains and only 50% of it is subject to taxes. The portion considered as employment benefit is tracked by the employer and included in Box 40 of your T4 slip. It is your responsibility to track the capital gains portion of ESPP profits and report it in Schedule 3 of your tax return.
The peculiarities of the tax treatment of ESPPs underline the risks inherent in holding on to company stock. If you were offered shares at $2 when the company stock is trading at $20, you are on hook for income tax on the difference, irrespective of what you finally sold the stock for. If the stock tanked and you finally sold at $2, you’ll have capital losses of $18 that can only be used to offset capital gains elsewhere in your portfolio, not the original employment benefit.
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17 responses so far ↓
1 Luc // Sep 27, 2007 at 1:11 am
“If you were offered shares at $2 when the company stock is trading at $20″
It’s true with a minor variation because you can sell the stock the same day they show up in your account. For example, my company buys ESPP every 6 months and the offer prices is the lowest of (1st day, last day). In the worst case, if you sell the same day, you profit from the employment benefit (-tax). Of course, the danger is that you hold onto the stock and if it drops, the scenario you described occurs: you’re taxed on the benefit on the day of offering.
2 Sean // Sep 27, 2007 at 8:34 am
Just to add an important reminder that you as the employee are responsible for keeping track of your taxes. The employment benefit will be deducted at source, but you may get other forms, especially if your plan is handled by a third party. You must validate the information on those forms.
I used to work for a company that had an ESPP (a large Canadian HR company) and they messed up the paperwork that was sent to the ESPP provider. The result is the tax slips that came from the third party showed a capital gain that included the employment benefit, meaning we were being taxed twice. I only noticed it after my second or third year in the plan, and the company wouldn’t help me figure it out. After talking to many people over at CRA and the ESPP provider I found the real answer (that we had been getting double taxed), filed a tax adjustment and got back around $3,000. Even after all of that the HR department refused to send out an email explaining the problem. They eventually sent out a fairly vague email telling people to consult a tax professional.
@LUC - I had a similar setup except there was a 5 day window from when I received the shares (from my employer) to when they showed up in my account to sell. Any fluctuation in the share price in those 5 days was a capital gain/loss.
Sean
3 Canadian Capitalist // Sep 27, 2007 at 10:02 am
Sean: Thanks for the comment. It happened once to me when the accountants forgot to add the ESPP benefit to the T4 slip. I waited until they sent a new one with the correct information before netfiling but a lot of colleagues went ahead and filed their taxes and had to submit an adjustment later.
4 Calvin // Sep 27, 2007 at 11:05 am
Does anyone here have any experience with the tax treatment of Restricted Stock Units?
I have a set amount that vests in November and the taxes on them are ridiculous — 46%?
Is there any way around this?
5 Traciatim // Sep 27, 2007 at 1:13 pm
I noticed in the comment above that you are taxed on the benefit at the time of the offering. Does that mean, for instance, that if your ESPP offered shares at a 10% discount of the closing price of the day of purchase that the purchase would be taxable in the current tax year, no matter when the stocks were actually sold?
So for instance, stock closes at $100, an we buy 10 shares through the ESPP, at $90.00. This will then be included ($10 * 10 shares = $100) on my current year income tax. In 5 years I sell these stocks for $125 a piece. So I have a $250 Capital gain ($100 -> $125 * 10)
Am I following correctly? I used to participate in the ESPP through work, and no one explained this to me.
6 Plan for an ESPP | the Wealthy Canadian // Sep 27, 2007 at 1:16 pm
[...] Canadian Capitalist posted today about how Employee Stock Purchase Plans are taxes. Particularly, he points out that [...]
7 Canadian Capitalist // Sep 27, 2007 at 1:34 pm
Traciatim: Yeah. Your math is correct.
Employment benefit = ($100 - $90) * 10 = $100
Capital gains = ($125 - $100) * 10 = $250
The employment benefit will usually automatically be added to your T4 (tax may or may not be deducted at source) and reported in the current year.
The capital gains is declared in the tax return 5 years hence. If you made a mistake in earlier year’s tax returns, you could file an amendment.
8 Canadian Capitalist // Sep 27, 2007 at 4:06 pm
Calvin: I have no idea how restricted stock units are taxed. I know many US-based companies don’t offer them in Canada and continue to offer stock options.
9 Philip S // Sep 27, 2007 at 5:30 pm
CC,
In all cases of stock options, you can defer the benefits from being included in income. Go to the CRA website (www.cra.gc.ca) and get form T1212. You can defer the inclusion of stock option benefits in income until you dispose of the shares.
Calvin - Restricted Stock Units aren’t recognized in Canada the same way they are in the States. In Canada, the stocks are taxed the same way an ESPP is….the taxable benefit is included in income (as employment income) in the year the Units are granted and the capital gains are included in income when they are realized.
With Restricted Stock Units, you have a vesting period (thus the term restricted stock units). You need to hold the stocks for a period of time OR until they reach a certain value….this depends on the terms set out in the agreement with your employer. This is where you need to be careful. If you don’t fulfil the requirements of the vesting period, you can’t claim anything against your employment income. With Restricted Stock Units, you have no choice but to hold onto them until they vest.
An example is best. In November 2005 you received 100 Restricted Stock Units for $8.00/share and a FMV of $10.00. The vesting period is 2 years. You would’ve reported $200 ($2X100) as taxable income on your 2005 tax return at line 101.
If you quit your job in 2006, or don’t meet the vesting requirements, you’re out of luck. The $200 is included in income in 2005 and there’s no corresponding deduction you can claim in 2006.
If you do make it through the vesting period, in November 2007 you can sell the stock. If you sell it at a gain, you claim capital gains on the stock…if not, you claim a loss.
10 Calvin // Oct 2, 2007 at 12:51 pm
Thanks for your help everyone.
It was my understanding that with restricted stock units, all the shares that vest are considered a capital gain (different from stock options where the gain is the difference between the strike price and sell price).
Here’s my situation:
At the end of November, 125 shares will vest and the current market value is $50/share.
I’m guessing the full amount will be considered capital gain and I will be taxed accordingly?
Calvin
11 dropby // Oct 4, 2007 at 1:42 pm
Calvin, I definitely hope you are right. I always thought with Restricted Stock Unit, all the amounts on the vesting day is considered as your income. I hope I was wrong. Anyway, if they are considered as income, they should show up in T4 slip, right?
12 crete188 // Nov 2, 2007 at 10:48 am
I participate in a one-for-one ESPP. The shares that are released to me by the company are considered as a taxable benefit and included as income. The shares I purchase (on a quarterly basis) are not discounted but valued according to the weighted average price of the last five business days of the quarter.
I sell all my shares as soon as the company releases its holdings to me, but I have no idea how I’m supposed to claim this. Say I have 2000 shares. 1000 shares purchased by me and 1000 shares purchased by my company on my behalf (as a taxable benefit).
Do I have to calculate capital gains on the company shares ?
What is the cost of the company shares?
Do I only claim a capital gain on my own purchases?
13 Canadian Capitalist // Nov 2, 2007 at 12:01 pm
crete: Your company should tell you the Fair Market Value (FMV) of the matched shares. Just ask someone at accounting. They already know this because they probably already include the value of the matched shares in your T4 (best to check that’s the case).
Yes, when you sell, you have to calculate the capital gains on the company shares as well. Just use the FMV from accounting as the cost of the shares.
14 Leo // Jan 8, 2008 at 9:04 pm
I participate in a ESPP for a US stock company, but I work in a Canadian branch. Does the 2 year holding time for it to be taxed as capital gain apply to me? Am I subject to US taxes, Canadian taxes, or both?
Thanks in advance.
15 Canadian Capitalist // Jan 8, 2008 at 9:19 pm
Leo: Can you explain a little bit more? I’m not sure what 2-year holding period you are referring to. Are you referring to US tax treatment of short-term and long-term capital gains? Under Canadian tax rules, there is no distinction between the two.
50% of your capital gains are taxed in Canada. There is no US tax as long as you are classified as a Canadian resident.
16 Leo // Jan 9, 2008 at 8:40 pm
Hi Canadian Capitalist,
Yes, I was referring to the US tax treatment of short-term and long-term capital gains.
Thanks for your response, that was helpful. So if I am not mistaken, selling my stocks immediately after the purchase date, as opposed to selling my stocks 2 years after the purchase date has no taxation benefit.
17 Canadian Capitalist // Jan 9, 2008 at 9:54 pm
Leo: Actually, there may be capital gains or losses to report even if you sell immediately. Let’s say the stock closed at $15 which your company shares were trading at when they were given to you (the company provides this information for you). Next day, when you sold the shares it was trading at $15.25. You’ll have to report the difference as capital gains. Usually, the difference will be very small if you sell immediately. Still, you have to keep track of any gains / losses and report them at tax time.
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