17 tagged with "Executive Compensation"
Nonqualified deferred compensation, SERPs, equity awards, Section 409A compliance, and other strategies for compensating senior executives and key employees
Section 280G Golden Parachute Payments: The 3× Trigger, 20% Excise Tax, and the Private Company Cleansing Vote
Section 280G disallows the corporate deduction and imposes a 20% Section 4999 excise tax once parachute payments to a disqualified individual reach three times the executive's five-year average W-2 compensation, with the penalty applying to everything above 1× the base amount. Private companies can eliminate the consequences entirely through a 75% disinterested shareholder vote paired with conditional waivers signed before closing.
Section 83(b) Election: The 30-Day Window That Saves Founders From a Phantom Tax Bill
How the IRS Section 83(b) election converts phantom ordinary income on unvested startup stock into long-term capital gains, what the new Form 15620 online portal requires, and when filing is the wrong move.
Section 162(m) and the $1 Million Cap: Why Your Covered Employee List Is About to Get a Lot Longer in 2026
Section 162(m) caps a public company's federal deduction for executive pay at $1 million per person. Starting in 2026, OBBBA aggregates compensation across the IRC § 414 controlled group — including partnerships and LLCs — and the ARPA expansion adds the five highest-paid employees to the covered list in 2027.
Phantom Stock and SARs: How Private Companies Reward Key Employees With Synthetic Equity Without Diluting the Cap Table
A practical guide to phantom stock and SARs for private companies — how the plans work, why Section 409A's 20% penalty is the rule that breaks most informal arrangements, how ASC 718 liability accounting affects EBITDA, and when synthetic equity beats options, RSUs, or an ESOP.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation: Section 409A, Rabbi Trusts, and the 20% Penalty Executives Need to Avoid
Section 409A lets companies defer executive pay above 401(k) limits, but a single misstep triggers immediate taxation on every vested dollar plus a 20% federal penalty and premium interest. Here is how NQDC plans, rabbi trusts, and the six permissible distribution triggers actually work.