HR & Employment
정의
An ESOP is a qualified employee benefit plan that gives workers ownership interest in the company, typically through shares allocated over time based on tenure and compensation.
ESOPs are most commonly used in two contexts: as an employee retention and ownership-sharing tool in private companies, and as a business succession mechanism where the ESOP buys out a retiring founder's stake. In the succession context, selling to an ESOP offers significant tax advantages — sellers can defer capital gains taxes under Section 1042 if proceeds are reinvested in qualified replacement property. ESOP companies are 100% S-Corp exempt from federal income tax if the ESOP owns 100% of S-Corp shares. The structure is complex, requiring ongoing administration, annual valuation, and ERISA compliance. For early-stage startups, stock option plans (ISOs or NSOs) are more common than formal ESOPs. 'ESOP' is sometimes loosely used to describe any equity incentive program, but technically refers to the qualified plan structure.
For business owners thinking about succession or exit, ESOPs offer a path that preserves company culture, rewards employees, and can provide significant tax benefits. For employees receiving equity in a startup, understanding the difference between an ESOP and a stock option plan matters for tax planning and expectations about liquidity. A tax advisor and business attorney working together can model whether an ESOP structure makes sense for your situation.