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When restricted stock units vest, your employer withholds federal supplemental tax at a flat 22% (37% above $1M cumulative). If your true marginal bracket is higher, you are under-withheld and will owe the difference at filing. This calculator quantifies that gap for 2026, including FICA and state supplemental rates.
Gross RSU value
$200,000
Total withheld
$69,160
Filing-time owed
$32,140
True marginal
35%
A $200K RSU vest in California for a single filer at $400K total comp: employer withholds $69,160 (federal 22% + FICA + CA 10.23%). True marginal federal rate is 35%, so you can expect to owe approximately $32,140 at filing — almost entirely driven by the 22% supplemental rate falling short of your real bracket.
Source: FinCalc server-rendered example using the same formulas as the interactive calculator.
When RSUs vest, your employer withholds a flat 22% federal supplemental rate (37% on amounts above $1M cumulative supplemental wages). If your true marginal bracket is 32%, 35%, or 37%, you are under-withheld and will owe the difference at filing. This calculator estimates that gap so you can plan estimated payments or extra W-4 withholding now.
Gross vest value: $200,000
Base salary YTD + prior bonuses + prior vests this year.
Prior bonuses + RSU vests this year (drives the $1M / 37% rule).
EDD requires 10.23% on bonuses/RSUs; top marginal 13.3% means most high earners owe more at filing.
Auto-derived: 35% based on your projected total income.
Estimated withholding gap
$32,140
Your employer is withholding 22.0% federal and 10.23% state on this vest, but your true marginal rate is 35% federal + 13.30% state. Expect to owe roughly $32,140 at filing. Consider extra W-4 withholding or quarterly estimated payments.
Gross RSU value
$200,000
Total withheld
$69,160
34.6% effective
Net take-home
$130,840
654 shares retained
Filing-time owed
$32,140
gap vs true marginal
| Component | Rate | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Federal supplemental (22% on first $1M cumulative) | 22% | $44,000 |
| Social Security (6.2% up to $184,500 wage base) | 6.2% | $0 |
| Medicare | 1.45% | $2,900 |
| Additional Medicare (over $200K/$250K) | 0.9% | $1,800 |
| California state withholding | 10.23% | $20,460 |
| Total withheld at vest | 34.6% | $69,160 |
Sell-to-cover: 346 shares sold at vest to pay withholding; 654 shares retained (worth $130,800).
| Component | Withheld | True tax (marginal) | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal | $44,000 | $70,000 | $26,000 |
| State (California) | $20,460 | $26,600 | $6,140 |
| Total gap | $32,140 |
$200,000 RSU vest in California: $69,160 withheld at vest (federal 22.0% + FICA + state). Your true marginal rate is 35.0%, so expect to owe roughly $32,140 more at filing.
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Restricted stock units (RSUs) are taxed as ordinary W-2 wages at the moment they vest. The full fair market value (FMV) of the vested shares is added to your wages, and your employer is required to withhold federal, FICA, and state taxes — usually by selling a portion of shares to cover the bill (a “sell-to-cover” transaction).
The IRS-mandated supplemental withholding rate is 22% on the first $1M of supplemental wagesper employee per year, then 37% on amounts above $1M. For a single filer earning $400K of total comp, the true marginal federal rate is 35%. Withholding at 22% means the employer collects 13 cents on the dollar less than the true tax. On a $200K vest, that’s a $26,000 federal shortfall on top of any state gap.
| State | Supplemental withholding | Top marginal | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | 10.23% | 13.30% | EDD requires 10.23% on bonuses/RSUs; top marginal 13.3% means most high earners owe more at filing. |
| New York | 11.70% | 10.90% | NYS uses 11.70% supplemental on bonus/RSU; NYC adds local tax (~3.876%) which is withheld separately. |
| Massachusetts | 5.00% | 9.00% | Flat 5% withholding; 4% surtax kicks in on income over $1M (effective 9% top rate). |
| Washington | 0.00% | 0.00% | No state income tax. RSU value still subject to federal supplemental + FICA. |
| Texas | 0.00% | 0.00% | No state income tax. RSU value still subject to federal supplemental + FICA. |
| Florida | 0.00% | 0.00% | No state income tax. RSU value still subject to federal supplemental + FICA. |
Sell-to-cover sells just enough shares at vest to satisfy the withholding obligation — leaving you with the retained shares and zero out-of-pocket tax cost. Hold-all-shares (sometimes called “cash withholding”) means the employer collects the tax from your regular paycheck and you keep every vested share. Hold-all-shares increases concentration risk in your employer stock and reduces your cash flow during the vest month; most planners default to sell-to-cover.
At vest, your cost basis is set to the FMV at vest (already taxed as ordinary income). If you sell within 12 months, any additional gain or loss is short-term — taxed at ordinary rates. If you hold the shares more than 12 months from the vest date, gains are long-term: 0% / 15% / 20% LTCG, plus 3.8% NIIT for high earners. Holding longer is not always the right answer — concentration risk in a single stock can dwarf the LTCG savings.
Data and assumptions align with official publications. For verification and current figures:
Employers use the IRS-mandated 22% federal supplemental rate on the first $1M of supplemental wages (37% above $1M) regardless of your true marginal bracket. If you are in the 32%, 35%, or 37% bracket, withholding is automatically 10-15 percentage points short. The gap shows up as a balance due when you file.
At vest, you owe ordinary income tax on the full FMV. Your cost basis becomes that FMV. If you sell within 12 months of vesting, any further gain is short-term and taxed at ordinary rates. If you hold more than 12 months from the vest date, gains are long-term (0%/15%/20% LTCG plus 3.8% NIIT for high earners). The holding period clock starts at vest, not grant.
If your total withholding will be less than the smaller of 90% of current-year tax or 110% of prior-year tax (for AGI over $150K), the IRS may charge an underpayment penalty. Many RSU-heavy employees increase W-4 withholding from salary or make Q3/Q4 estimated payments via Form 1040-ES to cover the supplemental gap.
Wash sale rules apply to losses, not vests. If you sell RSU shares at a loss and buy substantially identical shares within 30 days before or after the sale, the loss is disallowed and added to the basis of the replacement shares. New RSU vests within that window can trigger the rule, so coordinate vest timing with tax-loss harvesting.
No. RSUs are taxed as ordinary W-2 wages, with no preference item created. AMT is mostly a risk for ISO exercises and large itemized deductions, not RSUs. The post-TCJA AMT exemption is also high enough that very few RSU earners hit it.
Federal law requires 37% withholding on cumulative supplemental wages over $1M per employee per calendar year. The 22% rate applies to the first $1M; anything above is withheld at 37%. If you have a large multi-million-dollar vest or multiple vests adding up past $1M, the upper tranche is automatically withheld closer to the top marginal rate, partially closing the gap.
Sell-to-cover sells just enough shares to fund the tax withholding, leaving you with diversified outcome only on the retained shares. Holding all shares (and paying tax from cash) increases concentration risk in your employer stock. Most planners suggest selling enough at vest to cover the tax bill plus the gap — anything more is a separate concentration-management decision.
You still owe tax on the FMV at vest, even if the stock drops afterward. A vest at $100/share that falls to $40 still triggers ordinary income tax on the $100 amount. If you then sell at $40, you have a $60/share short-term capital loss (assuming sale within 12 months). This is the classic "tax on phantom income" problem RSU holders face during downturns.
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