Most engineers focus obsessively on base salary negotiations and treat stock options as a take-it-or-leave-it number. This is a mistake that can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars over a career.
In my experience negotiating hundreds of startup offers at SmithSpektrum, equity is often the most flexible component of compensation—and where the biggest money is won or lost. The engineers who negotiate equity effectively often capture 20-50% more than those who accept the initial offer. On a meaningful grant, that's the difference between a nice bonus and a down payment on a house[^1].
Here's how to negotiate stock options like someone who understands what they're worth.
Why Engineers Fail at Equity Negotiation
The failure modes are consistent:
Not negotiating at all costs 20-50% in equity value. Many engineers assume equity is fixed. It rarely is.
Accepting share count without context makes offers impossible to evaluate. 50,000 shares means nothing without knowing total shares outstanding.
Not asking about dilution leads to surprise at exit. Your 0.1% could be 0.05% by the time there's a liquidity event.
Ignoring exercise terms can force you to forfeit options or come up with six figures in cash within 90 days of leaving.
Comparing shares across companies compares apples to oranges. Share count is meaningless; percentage ownership matters.
Getting the Information You Need
Before you can negotiate effectively, you need data that companies often don't volunteer:
| Information | Why You Need It |
|---|---|
| Number of options | Your raw share count |
| Total shares outstanding (fully diluted) | To calculate your percentage |
| Current 409A valuation | The strike price basis |
| Latest preferred share price | What investors paid |
| Strike price | Your cost to exercise |
| Vesting schedule | When you actually get the shares |
| Post-termination exercise window | Time to exercise after leaving |
| Option pool size | How much equity is available |
If a company won't disclose fully diluted share count, that's a red flag. They're either hiding information or haven't thought through their equity program—neither is good.
Once you have the numbers, calculate your ownership:
Your ownership % = Your options ÷ Fully diluted shares × 100
Example: 50,000 options out of 10,000,000 fully diluted shares = 0.5%
Valuing Your Options
Equity valuation is part science, part art. Here's a framework for thinking about expected value:
| Company Stage | P(Exit) | Expected Exit Multiple | Risk-Adjusted Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-seed | 5% | 100x | 5x current |
| Seed | 10% | 50x | 5x current |
| Series A | 15% | 20x | 3x current |
| Series B | 25% | 10x | 2.5x current |
| Series C+ | 40% | 5x | 2x current |
| Pre-IPO | 60% | 2x | 1.2x current |
Let's make this concrete. Suppose you're offered 0.1% (10,000 options) at a Series B company with a $100M 409A valuation and a $2 strike price.
At a 5x exit ($500M), your gross value is $500,000 minus $20,000 exercise cost = $480,000 net.
At a 10x exit ($1B), your gross value is $1,000,000 minus $20,000 = $980,000 net.
But the company might also fail, in which case your options are worth $0.
Using the probability framework: (25% × $980,000) + (25% × $480,000) + (50% × $0) = $365,000 expected value.
This helps you compare cash compensation to equity compensation on an apples-to-apples basis—though you should generally weight cash more heavily given its certainty.
What You Can Actually Negotiate
| Component | Negotiability | Typical Gain |
|---|---|---|
| Number of shares/options | High | 20-50% more |
| Exercise price | Low | Rarely moves |
| Vesting schedule | Medium | Reduced cliff |
| Exercise window | Medium | 90 days → 5-10 years |
| Acceleration clauses | Medium | Single/double trigger |
| Early exercise | Medium | Tax benefits |
Asking for More Options
This is the most direct lever. The script is simple:
"Based on comparable offers and my research on typical grants for this role at similar-stage companies, I was hoping for something closer to [X%]. Is there flexibility to close that gap?"
Back this up with data from Levels.fyi, equity surveys, or other offers you've received.
Exercise Window
The standard 90-day post-termination exercise window is a trap. If you leave after vesting significant options, you may need to come up with substantial cash to exercise or forfeit everything.
Consider this scenario: you leave after 2 years with 100,000 vested options at a $2 strike. You'd need $200,000 within 90 days to exercise—or lose them entirely.
With a 10-year exercise window, you can wait for a liquidity event to exercise, when you'll have proceeds to cover the cost.
The script: "The 90-day exercise window concerns me. If I leave after vesting significant options, I'd need to find substantial cash quickly or forfeit them. Would the company consider a 5-year or 10-year window?"
Many companies, especially at earlier stages, will agree to this. It costs them nothing and improves their offer.
Acceleration Clauses
For senior roles, negotiate acceleration protection:
Single-trigger acceleration: Your options accelerate immediately upon acquisition. This is typically reserved for executives and very senior ICs.
Double-trigger acceleration: Your options accelerate if you're terminated without cause following an acquisition. This is more commonly available.
The script: "Given the level of this role, would the company consider double-trigger acceleration on change of control?"
Negotiation Leverage
What gives you leverage in equity negotiation?
| Factor | Leverage Level |
|---|---|
| Competing offer | Very High |
| Rare/specialized skills | High |
| Company needs you urgently | High |
| Strong referral from investor/exec | Medium |
| Multiple interview rounds passed | Low-Medium |
If you have a competing offer with stronger equity, use it directly: "I have another offer with X% equity at a similar-stage company. [Company] is my first choice, but the equity difference is significant. Is there room to close that gap?"
If you don't have a competing offer, lean on market data: "Based on my research on Levels.fyi and conversations with my network, the typical grant for this role at this stage is X%. The current offer is below that range."
Never lie about competing offers. The startup world is small, and this can permanently damage your reputation.
Tax Considerations
Understanding tax implications can save you tens of thousands of dollars.
ISOs vs. NSOs
| Factor | ISO | NSO |
|---|---|---|
| Tax at grant | None | None |
| Tax at exercise | AMT on spread | Ordinary income |
| Tax at sale | Long-term capital gains | Capital gains on post-exercise gain |
| Best for | Early exercise, long hold | Near-exit, immediate liquidity |
The 83(b) Election
If you can early exercise (exercise before vesting), filing an 83(b) election within 30 days lets you pay taxes on the low current value rather than the potentially higher value at vesting.
This is valuable when: you're very early (low 409A), you're confident in the company, and you can afford the tax bill.
It's risky because: if the company fails, you've paid taxes on worthless stock.
Comparing Offers
When evaluating multiple offers, compare on percentage ownership, not share count:
| Metric | Company A | Company B |
|---|---|---|
| Base salary | $180K | $170K |
| Options | 20,000 | 50,000 |
| Ownership % | 0.05% | 0.15% |
| Latest valuation | $500M | $200M |
| Current equity value | $250K | $300K |
| Exit potential (5x) | $1.25M | $1.5M |
| Exit probability | 30% | 20% |
| Risk-adjusted value | $375K | $300K |
In this example, Company A has lower ownership percentage but higher risk-adjusted value due to better exit probability. Company B has more upside if it succeeds but more risk.
Your decision depends on your risk tolerance, financial situation, and which company you believe in more.
Handling Pushback
When companies push back, pivot:
| Their Response | Your Counter |
|---|---|
| "Our equity bands are fixed" | "Is there flexibility in signing bonus to offset?" |
| "We can't change vesting" | "What about the exercise window instead?" |
| "That's above our range" | "What would I need to demonstrate to earn that level?" |
| "Equity is non-negotiable" | "What about an early performance-based refresh?" |
The key is having multiple levers. If one is fixed, ask about another.
Red Flags in Equity Offers
Watch for these warning signs:
Only share count, no context: If they won't tell you fully diluted count, they're hiding something.
90-day exercise window: This is an aggressive term that can force you to forfeit.
No acceleration clause: Zero protection in an acquisition scenario.
Unusually high strike price: The 409A may be stale or the company may be in trouble.
Vesting starting on arbitrary future date: Your vesting clock should start on your first day.
The best equity negotiators I've worked with share one trait: they treat the negotiation as collaborative rather than adversarial. They're not trying to extract maximum value—they're trying to reach a deal that works for both sides and sets up a healthy working relationship.
But they also know what they're worth, they do their research, and they ask for what's fair. That's not adversarial. That's professional.
References
[^1]: SmithSpektrum offer negotiation data, 500+ negotiations analyzed, 2020-2026. [^2]: Index Ventures, "The Option Plan Guide," 2024. [^3]: Carta, "Equity by the Numbers," 2025. [^4]: Levels.fyi, "Startup Compensation Data," 2026.
Need help evaluating or negotiating a stock option offer? Contact SmithSpektrum for confidential offer analysis.
Author: Irvan Smith, Founder & Managing Director at SmithSpektrum