Vesting Schedule Agreement
VESTING SCHEDULE AGREEMENT
This Vesting Schedule Agreement (the "Agreement") is entered into as of [Effective Date] (the "Grant Date" or "Effective Date"), by and between:
[Company Name], a [Company State] corporation / limited liability company (the "Company"); and
[Recipient Name], serving as [Recipient Role] of the Company (the "Recipient").
1. EQUITY GRANT
1.1 Grant. Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Company hereby grants to Recipient [Grant Amount] of [Equity Type] (the "Equity").
1.2 Purchase / Exercise Price. The purchase or exercise price for the Equity is [Purchase Price].
1.3 Nature of Grant. The Equity is subject to vesting as set forth in Section 2 below and shall not be fully owned or exercisable by Recipient until it has vested.
2. VESTING SCHEDULE
2.1 Total Vesting Period. The Equity shall vest over a period of [Vesting Period] from the Effective Date, subject to Recipient's continued service to the Company.
2.2 Cliff. No Equity shall vest during the first [Cliff Period] of the vesting period (the "Cliff"). At the end of the Cliff, [Cliff Percent] of the total Equity grant shall vest in a single lump sum, provided Recipient remains in continuous service through that date.
2.3 Continued Vesting. Following the Cliff, the remaining unvested Equity shall vest [Vesting Frequency] over the remainder of the vesting period, subject to Recipient's continued service.
2.4 No Rights Before Vesting. Until the Equity vests, Recipient shall have no right to transfer, assign, or otherwise dispose of the unvested portion.
3. ACCELERATION OF VESTING
[Acceleration Type].
For purposes of this Agreement, a "Change of Control" means a merger, acquisition, sale of all or substantially all of the Company's assets, or other transaction in which the Company's existing stockholders do not retain majority voting control of the surviving entity.
4. FORFEITURE AND REPURCHASE
[Forfeiture Terms]
5. TAX CONSIDERATIONS
5.1 Tax Advice. Recipient acknowledges that the Company has made no representations or warranties regarding the tax treatment of this Equity grant. Recipient is solely responsible for all federal, state, and local taxes arising from this grant and is advised to consult a qualified tax advisor before accepting this grant.
5.2 Section 83(b) Election. If Recipient receives restricted stock (actual shares subject to vesting), Recipient may elect within thirty (30) days of the Effective Date to be taxed at grant under IRC § 83(b). This election is irrevocable. The Company will cooperate with Recipient in filing the election if timely submitted.
6. GENERAL PROVISIONS
6.1 Governing Law. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State], without regard to conflict of law principles.
6.2 No Employment Contract. This Agreement does not create a contract of employment for any definite period of time. Recipient's employment or service relationship with the Company remains at-will unless governed by a separate written employment agreement.
6.3 Entire Agreement. This Agreement (together with any equity plan document referenced herein) constitutes the entire agreement of the Parties with respect to the Equity and supersedes all prior agreements and representations.
6.4 Amendment. This Agreement may only be modified by a written instrument signed by both Parties.
6.5 Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in counterparts. Electronic signatures are valid under the E-SIGN Act.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have executed this Vesting Schedule Agreement as of the Effective Date.
COMPANY: [Company Name]
By: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Name and Title: _______________
RECIPIENT:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Recipient Name]
Company (Authorized Officer)
________________
Signature
Recipient
________________
Signature
What Is a Vesting Schedule Agreement?
A Vesting Schedule Agreement in the United States sets out the rights, duties and consideration binding the parties to it.
The legal framework for equity vesting in the United States derives from a combination of federal tax law, state corporate and LLC statutes, and contract law. The Internal Revenue Code plays a central role: IRC § 83 governs the taxation of property transferred in connection with the performance of services, establishing that unvested equity (subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture) is not taxable until restrictions lapse — unless the recipient makes an IRC § 83(b) election within 30 days of the grant date to be taxed at the time of grant. The Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL), which governs the majority of US startups and public companies, sets out the rules for stock issuances and transfers under Sections 151–160. California Corporations Code §§ 409 and 418 address equity issuance for California-incorporated companies.
For equity option grants, the Internal Revenue Code distinguishes between Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) under IRC § 422, which receive preferential tax treatment (no ordinary income on grant or exercise, though potentially subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax under IRC § 56), and Non-Qualified Stock Options (NQSOs), which generate ordinary income at exercise equal to the spread between the exercise price and the fair market value. ISOs may only be granted to employees, not to advisors or independent contractors, and are subject to a $100,000 annual ISO limit under IRC § 422(d).
Vesting schedules are a standard feature of equity compensation at venture-backed startups and public companies alike. The National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) Model Legal Documents include standard vesting provisions widely adopted in the US startup community. The four-year vesting schedule with a one-year cliff — under which 25% of the total grant vests at the end of the first year and the remainder vests monthly over the following 36 months — became the US market standard in Silicon Valley during the 1990s and remains dominant. Investors represented by firms such as Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, and Kleiner Perkins routinely require founder vesting as a condition of Series A financing.
For LLC membership interests, vesting schedules operate under the framework of the Operating Agreement rather than a stock plan, subject to state LLC statutes including the Delaware LLC Act (6 Del. C. § 18-101 et seq.) and the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (RULLCA), adopted in 21 states. Unvested LLC membership interests are treated as property under IRC § 83 in the same manner as restricted stock.
The Vesting Schedule Agreement interacts with several other corporate documents: the company's Stock Incentive Plan or Equity Compensation Plan (adopted by the board of directors and approved by stockholders for equity plan awards), the individual grant notice (specifying the type, amount, exercise price, and vesting schedule of a specific award), and, for options, the Stock Option Agreement. Together, these documents form the complete record of the equity award and govern the recipient's rights.
When Do You Need a Vesting Schedule Agreement?
A US Vesting Schedule Agreement is needed whenever a company grants equity — in any form — to a founder, employee, advisor, or service provider, and the parties intend for ownership to be earned over time rather than transferred immediately.
Founders of US startups need vesting agreements when bringing on co-founders or when receiving institutional investment. Venture capital investors — operating under the standard terms memorialized in NVCA Model Documents — universally require that founder equity be subject to a four-year vesting schedule as a condition of Series Seed, Series A, or later-stage financing. Without founder vesting, a co-founder who departs early retains their full equity stake, creating an ongoing cap table problem (the departed co-founder owns equity without contributing work). Angel investors and accelerator programs such as Y Combinator also routinely require or strongly recommend founder vesting.
Start-up companies and growth-stage businesses need Vesting Schedule Agreements when issuing stock options or RSUs to employees under a formal equity compensation plan. Most US technology companies — from early-stage startups to large public companies such as Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL), Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL), and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) — use equity compensation with multi-year vesting as a central element of employee total compensation. Companies that do not use written vesting agreements risk disputes over whether unvested equity should be forfeited when an employee departs.
Advisors and consultants who receive equity compensation for services need a Vesting Schedule Agreement specifying a vesting schedule appropriate to their advisory relationship — typically 1 to 2 years with monthly vesting, or milestone-based vesting tied to specific deliverables. The IRS Advisor Equity Framework under IRC § 83 applies to these grants; without a written agreement confirming that the equity is subject to forfeiture (a substantial risk of forfeiture), the advisor may be taxed on the full fair market value at the time of grant.
Companies that grant equity in connection with an acquisition or merger need Vesting Schedule Agreements that govern the treatment of assumed or substituted awards under the acquirer's equity plan. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires public companies to disclose equity award terms in proxy statements under Regulation S-K, Item 402.
LLC-structure businesses that allocate profits interests or membership interests to employees or service providers need Vesting Schedule Agreements structured to comply with IRS Revenue Procedure 93-27 and Revenue Procedure 2001-43, which govern the tax treatment of profits interests granted in connection with services.
In states such as California, where Labor Code § 201 and § 202 require prompt payment of wages upon termination, companies must confirm that unvested equity forfeiture provisions do not inadvertently conflict with state wage payment laws, since some courts have considered unvested equity to constitute wages in certain circumstances.
What to Include in Your Vesting Schedule Agreement
A properly drafted US Vesting Schedule Agreement must address each component of the equity grant with precision. Courts applying the Restatement (Second) of Contracts require that equity agreements meet the standard requirements for enforceability: offer, acceptance, consideration, and certainty of terms.
The grant description identifies the type of equity being granted (restricted stock, stock options — ISO or NQSO, RSUs, or membership interests), the total number of shares, units, or percentage interest, the company's current capitalization (total shares outstanding on a fully diluted basis), and the grant date. For stock options, the grant description must specify the exercise price per share, which for ISOs must equal at least 100% of fair market value on the date of grant under IRC § 422(b)(4) (110% for employees owning more than 10% of the company's stock).
The vesting schedule section specifies the vesting commencement date (often the employee's start date or the date of a specific agreement), the total vesting period (most commonly 4 years), the cliff period (most commonly 12 months, at the end of which 25% of the total grant vests), and the vesting frequency after the cliff (monthly vesting of 1/48 of the total grant per month is standard). For advisor grants, 1-to-2-year schedules with monthly vesting are typical. For performance-based vesting, specific performance milestones must be defined with objective, measurable criteria.
The forfeiture and repurchase provisions define what happens to unvested equity if the recipient leaves the company. For restricted stock, unvested shares are typically subject to a repurchase right at the original purchase price (often nominal — $0.001 per share for early-stage startups). The agreement should specify whether the company's repurchase right is mandatory (automatic forfeiture) or optional (the company may repurchase but is not required to). For stock options, unvested options are typically cancelled upon termination; vested but unexercised options must be exercised within a defined post-termination exercise period (typically 90 days for voluntary resignation under IRC § 422(a)(2), and up to 10 years for ISOs as the maximum option term under IRC § 422(b)(3)).
The acceleration provisions address whether and how unvested equity vests earlier than scheduled. Single-trigger acceleration causes vesting upon a change of control alone (acquisition of more than 50% of the company's voting stock, a merger in which the company is not the surviving entity, or a sale of substantially all of the company's assets). Double-trigger acceleration requires both a change of control and an involuntary termination without cause or resignation for good reason within a specified period following the change of control (typically 12 to 24 months). The agreement should define 'cause' and 'good reason' with specificity to avoid disputes.
The tax provisions address the IRC § 83(b) election for restricted stock — the agreement should inform the recipient of the 30-day election window and the consequences of making or not making the election. For ISO grants, the agreement must include the ISO disqualifying disposition provisions under IRC § 422(b), requiring the recipient to notify the company of any disposition of ISO shares within 2 years of the grant date or 1 year of exercise.
The representations and warranties section requires the recipient to represent that they have reviewed the agreement, understand its tax implications, have had the opportunity to consult an attorney and tax advisor, and are entering the agreement voluntarily. A statement that the agreement does not guarantee continued employment (for at-will employees) is required in California and other states to prevent the agreement from being construed as an employment contract.
The governing law clause specifies the state law governing the agreement (most commonly Delaware for Delaware corporations) and the forum for dispute resolution. For equity agreements tied to employment, California employers must be aware of Cal. Corp. Code § 25102(o), which provides an exemption from state securities registration for equity compensation plans meeting specified requirements.
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title = {Vesting Schedule Agreement (United States)},
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note = {Free legal document template. Based on Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)}
}Frequently Asked Questions
A vesting schedule is a timeline that determines when a recipient earns full ownership of equity — whether stock, stock options, restricted stock units, or LLC membership interests — that has been granted to them. Before the equity vests, the recipient does not have unconditional ownership; if they leave the company before vesting, they typically forfeit the unvested portion. Vesting schedules serve two key purposes: they incentivize founders, employees, and advisors to remain engaged with the company over time, and they protect the company (and remaining equity holders) from having someone walk away immediately after receiving a large equity grant. For startup founders, a vesting schedule is usually required by institutional investors as a condition of financing because it ensures founders remain committed. For employees receiving stock options or RSUs, the vesting schedule defines the timeline for exercising rights under the grant.
A cliff is a minimum period of service the recipient must complete before any equity vests. The most common structure in US startups and technology companies is a four-year vesting schedule with a one-year cliff. Under this structure, no equity vests during the first 12 months of service. At the end of the cliff period (month 12), 25% of the total grant vests in a lump sum. After the cliff, the remaining 75% vests ratably — typically monthly — over the following 36 months. If the recipient leaves or is terminated before the one-year cliff, they forfeit the entire grant. The cliff serves as a probationary period: it protects the company from granting equity to someone who proves to be a poor fit in the early months. Advisors and part-time contributors often receive shorter vesting periods — typically 1 to 2 years — with a shorter or no cliff.
Acceleration of vesting refers to provisions that cause unvested equity to vest earlier than the scheduled date, typically upon the occurrence of specified trigger events. There are two main types: single-trigger acceleration and double-trigger acceleration. Single-trigger acceleration causes vesting to accelerate automatically upon a single event — most commonly a change of control (acquisition) of the company. Double-trigger acceleration requires two events to occur: a change of control and a subsequent adverse employment action (such as termination without cause or a material reduction in role). Double-trigger acceleration is more common in investor-backed companies because it avoids having all unvested equity vest at the moment of acquisition (which reduces the acquirer's ability to retain employees post-close). Founders negotiating acceleration provisions should be aware that aggressive single-trigger acceleration can reduce the attractiveness of the company as an acquisition target.
The tax treatment of vesting equity depends on the type of equity and elections made at grant. For restricted stock (actual shares subject to forfeiture until vesting), the default rule under IRC § 83(a) is that the recipient recognizes ordinary income at the time of vesting, measured by the fair market value of the shares at that date minus any amount paid for them. However, the recipient may make an IRC § 83(b) election within 30 days of the grant date to recognize income at the time of grant (when the value may be nominal) rather than at vesting; this election can significantly reduce the tax burden for founders in early-stage companies. For stock options, incentive stock options (ISOs) eligible under IRC § 422 are generally not taxable upon grant or exercise (though they may trigger AMT), with taxation deferred until the shares are sold. Non-qualified stock options (NQSOs) create ordinary income at exercise equal to the spread between the exercise price and the fair market value.
When a company is acquired, the treatment of unvested equity is governed by the vesting schedule agreement, the company's equity plan (if any), and the terms negotiated in the acquisition agreement. The three main outcomes are: (1) assumption — the acquirer assumes the unvested equity and converts it into equivalent awards in the acquirer's equity on similar vesting terms; (2) substitution — the unvested equity is replaced with new awards in the acquirer's equity; or (3) acceleration — the unvested equity vests in full (or in part) as a result of the acquisition, typically pursuant to an acceleration clause. In most institutional acquisitions, the acquirer will negotiate to assume or substitute equity rather than allow full acceleration, to confirm key employees and founders remain incentivized post-close. Founders and employees with unvested equity should review their agreements' change-of-control provisions carefully before the company enters into sale negotiations.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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