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ESOP and RSU Taxation in India — Complete Guide for Tech Employees (FY 2025-26)

Last verified: April 2026, against Sections 17(2)(vi), 49(2AA), 112A, 49(2A), and CBDT clarifications on perquisite valuation of foreign-listed shares.

If you work at an Indian unicorn, MNC, or US/foreign-parent tech company, you’ve probably been granted ESOPs or RSUs. They’re powerful wealth-creation tools — and a tax minefield if mishandled. ESOPs/RSUs are taxed twice: once when they vest/exercise (as salary perquisite), and again when you sell (as capital gain). Foreign-parent equity adds Schedule FA disclosure obligations. This guide walks through both events, with math for Indian-listed and foreign-parent scenarios.

The two-tax structure

EventWhat’s taxedHow taxed
Grant (when company allots shares to you)Nothing
Vesting / Exercise (when you actually own them)Difference between FMV and exercise price (or RSU FMV)Salary perquisite, slab rate, TDS deducted
Sale (when you transfer for cash)Sale price minus FMV at vesting/exerciseCapital gain, STCG/LTCG rates

ESOP vs RSU — what’s the difference

ESOP (Employee Stock Option Plan): Right to buy shares at a pre-determined exercise price. You pay this price to convert options into shares. Common in startups (₹1 or face-value exercise price).

RSU (Restricted Stock Unit): Promise of shares for free at vesting (no exercise price). You get the share automatically — no cash outlay. Common in MNCs and large public companies.

Tax timing:

  • ESOPs: taxed at exercise (when you pay strike price to acquire shares)
  • RSUs: taxed at vesting (you receive shares automatically)

Vesting/exercise event = perquisite. Subsequent sale = capital gain.

Worked example 1 — Indian-listed company ESOPs

You work at an Indian listed company. Grant: 1,000 ESOPs, exercise price ₹100, vesting over 4 years.

Vesting/Exercise event (Year 2)

250 shares vest. Stock FMV at vesting: ₹500. You exercise (pay ₹25,000 = 250 × ₹100). FMV at exercise = ₹500.

  • Perquisite value: (₹500 − ₹100) × 250 = ₹1,00,000
  • Added to your salary as taxable perquisite
  • TDS at slab rate; for 30%-slab employee = ₹31,200 TDS

Cost of acquisition for future capital gain = FMV at exercise = ₹500/share.

Sale event (Year 3)

You sell 250 shares at ₹800. Held for 12+ months from exercise = LTCG.

  • Sale: 250 × ₹800 = ₹2,00,000
  • Cost basis: 250 × ₹500 = ₹1,25,000
  • LTCG: ₹75,000 (within ₹1.25 L exemption — see capital gains guide)
  • Tax: ₹0

Total tax across both events: ₹31,200. Net post-tax wealth from this batch: ₹2,00,000 − ₹25,000 (exercise cost) − ₹31,200 = ₹1,43,800.

Worked example 2 — US-parent company RSUs (Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta)

You work at the Indian arm of a US-parent. Grant: 100 RSUs vesting over 4 years. Stock vests at $200/share. INR/USD: ₹83.

Vesting event (Year 1)

25 shares vest. FMV at vesting: $200 × ₹83 = ₹16,600/share. Total perquisite: 25 × ₹16,600 = ₹4,15,000.

  • Perquisite added to your salary as “salary in foreign company shares”
  • Indian employer (the local subsidiary) deducts TDS at slab rate from your subsequent salary
  • For 30%-slab: TDS = ~₹1,29,480
  • Often the company sells some RSUs at vesting to cover TDS (“sell-to-cover”)

Sale event (Year 2)

You sell 25 shares at $250. INR/USD: ₹84 at sale. Held over 24 months from grant but only ~12 months from vesting.

For unlisted (foreign) shares, holding period for LTCG is 24 months from acquisition (= vesting). So 12-month holding = STCG.

  • Sale value: 25 × $250 × ₹84 = ₹5,25,000
  • Cost basis (FMV at vesting): 25 × ₹16,600 = ₹4,15,000
  • STCG (foreign shares): ₹1,10,000 — taxed at slab rate (not 20% — Sec 111A applies only to listed Indian equity)
  • Plus FX gain/loss factored — appreciation of USD against INR is captured automatically in INR-equivalent computation

Schedule FA disclosure mandatory: Holdings in any foreign company at any point during the FY must be disclosed in Schedule FA of ITR-2 or ITR-3. Includes shares, brokerage account balances, foreign-source income.

The unique RSU complications

1. Sell-to-cover

Most foreign-parent companies automatically sell ~30-40% of vesting RSUs to cover Indian TDS. The remaining shares come into your demat. Your “received” share count is post-sell-to-cover.

2. Dual taxation risk

Some foreign jurisdictions tax RSUs at vesting/exercise — and India taxes them too. For US-parent RSUs, India taxes the full FMV at vesting. The US generally doesn’t tax non-residents on grant. So no double taxation.

For foreign nationals on temporary assignment: tax residency matters. Run this with a CA experienced in cross-border taxation.

3. Foreign tax credit

If you’ve paid foreign taxes on the gain (via withholding by the foreign brokerage when selling), claim Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) under Section 90/91. File Form 67 with your ITR — without it, FTC is not allowed.

4. Schedule FA — the real concern

Even if your RSU value is small (₹50K), you must disclose all foreign holdings in Schedule FA. Concealment carries up to 7 years imprisonment + 300% penalty under the Black Money Act.

Schedule FA fields: country, name of foreign company, address, shares held at start of FY, peak balance during FY, ending balance, dividend income, sale proceeds. Multiple lines if you hold multiple foreign companies.

The 5-year vesting RSU plan — total tax over time

Hypothetical: ₹50 L total RSU grant vesting at 25% per year over 4 years. Stock appreciates 10% per year. 30%-slab Indian employee.

YearVesting valuePerquisite tax (~31%)Sale gain (Yr+2)STCG/LTCG tax
1₹12.50 L~₹3.88 L~₹2.5 L~₹31K (LTCG above ₹1.25 L exemption is none here, but slab applies on foreign shares)
2₹13.75 L~₹4.26 L~₹2.75 L~₹35K
3₹15.13 L~₹4.69 L~₹3 L~₹38K
4₹16.64 L~₹5.16 L~₹3.3 L~₹41K

Total perquisite tax: ~₹17.99 L. Total cap gains tax: ~₹1.45 L. Net post-tax wealth from ₹50 L grant + appreciation: ~₹40 L.

Strategies to optimise

  1. Hold to 24 months post vesting for foreign shares = LTCG at 12.5% instead of slab 30%. Worth ~17.5% × gain.
  2. Time exercises across financial years for ESOPs to spread perquisite tax. Especially relevant if exercise is voluntary.
  3. Use the ₹1.25 L equity LTCG exemption for any Indian-listed equity vesting (effectively, sell ₹1.25 L worth of LTCG annually tax-free).
  4. Maintain Schedule FA disclosure scrupulously. Annual ritual: collect statements from your foreign brokerage, fill all foreign holdings.
  5. File Form 67 to claim FTC if foreign taxes were paid.

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

Are ESOPs taxed at grant?

No — only at exercise (when you pay the strike price) for ESOPs, or at vesting (automatic transfer) for RSUs. Grant itself is not a taxable event.

What is the perquisite valuation date?

For Indian-listed shares: closing price on vesting/exercise date. For foreign-listed shares: closing price on the foreign exchange on the equivalent date, converted at SBI’s TT buying rate on that date.

Can I defer ESOP tax to sale?

For eligible startup ESOPs (Section 80-IAC startups recognised by DPIIT), Budget 2020 allows deferring perquisite tax up to 5 years from exercise / sale of shares / cessation of employment, whichever earliest. Most established companies don’t qualify.

Are RSUs from Indian-listed companies subject to Schedule FA?

No — only foreign company holdings. Indian-listed RSUs follow standard 12-month holding for LTCG (same as listed equity).

What’s the tax on dividends received on foreign-parent RSUs?

Slab rate as “income from other sources.” Foreign withholding tax (typically 15-30% in US) can be claimed as FTC under Section 90 — file Form 67.

What if I leave the company before vesting?

Unvested ESOPs/RSUs typically lapse — no tax event. Vested but unsold ESOPs follow normal sale taxation when you eventually sell. Keep your demat and access to broker post-resignation.

Sources & references

  • Sections 17(2)(vi), 49(2AA), 49(2A), 112A of the Income Tax Act
  • CBDT Notification on RSU FMV computation for foreign companies
  • Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) Act, 2015
  • Form 67 specifications for Foreign Tax Credit

Last verified: April 2026. RSU and ESOP tax rules are stable; FX-conversion methodology is occasionally clarified by CBDT.

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