Can a company exercise stock options?
Mia Ramsey
Published Feb 12, 2026
Exercise your stock options to buy shares of your company stock, then sell just enough of the company shares (at the same time) to cover the stock option cost, taxes, and brokerage commissions and fees. The proceeds you receive from an exercise-and-sell-to-cover transaction will be shares of stock.
Can you exercise stock options in a private company?
Private company stock options are call options, giving the holder the right to purchase shares of the company’s stock at a specified price. This right to purchase – or “exercise” – stock options is often subject to a vesting schedule that defines when the options can be exercised.
How do I exercise an option for a company?
There are three main strategies you can take when you exercise your stock options:
- Cash for stock: Exercise-and-Hold. You purchase your option shares with cash and hold onto them.
- Cashless: Exercise-and-Sell. You purchase your option shares and then and immediately sell them.
- Cashless: Exercise-and-Sell-to-Cover.
Should I exercise my startup stock options?
Generally speaking, if your startup does well, it’s better to exercise your options as they vest. We’ll go into the two main reasons why – tax treatment and cash flow – but the quick-and-dirty answer is that if you trust your startup to grow, you’re better off exercising your stock options as soon as you can.
How much does it cost to exercise a stock option?
Here’s an example: You receive a stock option as part of your compensation package as a new employee at your company. The grant (strike) price of the option is $50 per share. Your option vests (see below). The price per share for the company stock is currently $100. You decide to exercise your option.
How are employee stock options worked out for startups?
Most Startups are Private Limited Companies and are governed by the Companies Act 2013. The Act permits the allotment of shares to employees of the Startup (or its holding or subsidiary company), under an approved ESOP, at a future date but, at pre-determined value.
What are stock options and what do they do?
Stock options aren’t actual shares of stock—they’re the right to buy a set number of company shares at a fixed price, usually called a grant price, strike price, or exercise price. Because your purchase price stays the same, if the value of the stock goes up, you could make money on the difference.
How to assign stock options to startup founders?
Of the many, many things that can be extremely confusing for a startup founder, how to assign startup stock options is undoubtedly near the top of the list. Stocks are a whole world unto themselves, complete with new vocabulary, confusing math, and complicated issues to consider.