Stock Options for Startup Employees: ISOs vs. NSOs Explained

Table of Contents

For many individuals and business owners, tax planning is something that happens once a year, typically a few weeks before filing. 

By that point, most decisions have already been made. 

Income has been earned. Expenses have been incurred. Opportunities have passed. 

Effective tax planning is not about reacting, it’s about timing. 

At TTS Advisory, we work with clients throughout the year to ensure financial decisions are made with full visibility into their tax impact. 

Why Year-End Planning Isn’t Enough

Waiting until year-end limits your ability to influence outcomes. 

At that stage: 

  • Options are restricted 
  • Adjustments are limited 
  • Decisions become reactive 


Year-round planning shifts the approach from: reacting to results to shaping outcomes in advance.
 

The Role of Timing in Tax Strategy

Tax outcomes are not just determined by what you do, but when you do it. 

Timing impacts: 

  • Income recognition 
  • Deductions 
  • Investments 
  • Distributions 


Understanding this allows for:
 

  • Better planning 
  • Improved efficiency 
  • Fewer surprises 

Key Areas Where Timing Matters

1. Income Recognition 

When income is recognized can significantly impact tax liability. 

Examples include: 

  • Bonuses 
  • Distributions 
  • Business revenue 


Strategic timing can:
 

  • Defer income 
  • Spread tax exposure 
  • Align with lower-tax periods 

2. Expense and Deduction Planning 

Expenses are often incurred without considering timing. 

But accelerating or delaying expenses can: 

  • Shift tax liability 
  • Improve cash flow 


This requires:
 

  • Forward planning 
  • Coordination with business operations 

3. Investment Decisions 

Investment activity—gains, losses, and rebalancing—should not be isolated from tax planning. 

Timing can influence: 

  • capital gains exposure 
  • loss utilization 
  • overall tax efficiency 

4. Business Decisions 

Hiring, expansion, and capital investments all carry tax implications. 

Planning ahead allows: 

  • Better structuring 
  • Optimized outcomes 
  • Reduced risk 

5. Multi-State Considerations 

For individuals and businesses operating across states, timing of activity and presence can affect tax exposure. 

This includes: 

  • Residency changes 
  • Business expansion 
  • Remote work 

What Year-Round Planning Looks Like

Effective planning is not constant activity—it’s structured, intentional review. 

At TTS Advisory, this typically includes: 

  • Periodic check-ins 
  • Reviewing financial activity 
  • Identifying upcoming decisions 
  • Aligning strategy with current position 

Common Misconceptions

“I’ll deal with it at tax time.” 

By then, most opportunities are gone. 

“Planning is only for large businesses.” 

Even small adjustments can create meaningful impact. 

“It’s too complicated.” 

With the right structure, planning becomes manageable and predictable. 

Our Approach

We focus on proactive, decision-stage guidance. 

This means: 

  • Identifying opportunities early 
  • Providing clarity before decisions are finalized 
  • Integrating tax strategy with financial activity 

Why it Matters

Year-round tax planning helps: 

  • Reduce overall tax liability 
  • Improve financial predictability 
  • Support better decision-making 
  • Eliminate surprises at filing 


More importantly, it creates confidence.
 

Final Thoughts

Tax planning is not about reacting to numbers, it’s about understanding how decisions shape outcomes.