TransWikia.com

Taxes on stock options for non-resident aliens

Personal Finance & Money Asked by Pavel P on May 29, 2021

I have ISO stock options as part of my employment in California, USA. In the middle of 2019 I had to leave the USA for family reasons. In 2020 I wasn’t in the US (became non-resident alien for tax purposes). In the beginning of 2020 I executed all my stock options, most of them vested while I was resident in California in 2016-2019.
Since the options vested while I was in California, I’ll need to pay AMT tax in 2020 after after executing stock options.
Are the stocks that I acquired after executing stock options subject to US taxes if I sell them later while being non-resident alien?

One Answer

Assuming that you hold the shares acquired with the exercise of your incentive stock options for more than a year after the exercise and two years after the grant, any further gain (or loss) - measured by the difference between the sale price of the shares and the amount paid for them on exercise ("strike price" or "exercise price") - should be considered a long term capital gain (or loss). As a nonresident alien, that gain should be exempt for US Federal income tax (don't know about California specifically).

Answered by Jack Fleeting on May 29, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP