The Section 1202 exclusion is one of the most valuable tax benefits in the U.S. tax code. It's also one of the most misunderstood — and easiest to lose. Here's everything founders, investors, employees, advisors, and small business owners need to know.
Many founders and investors who qualify for QSBS never fully protect it. Missed deadlines, undocumented eligibility, and avoidable mistakes cost millions at exit. Start here.
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A practical checklist for founders, investors, employees, advisors, and small business owners — covering the key requirements to qualify for and protect the Section 1202 gain exclusion. QSBS is not limited to VC-backed startups: any domestic C corporation under $75M in gross assets operating in a qualifying trade or business can issue QSBS. Individual circumstances vary. Always consult a qualified advisor about your specific situation.
From entity formation through exit, we provide the analysis, documentation, and guidance to protect your Section 1202 exclusion at every stage. Whether you're forming a company, writing a check, or approaching a liquidity event — getting QSBS right requires specialist expertise and contemporaneous documentation. Transparent flat-fee pricing — no billable hours, no surprises.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act raised the Section 1202 exclusion to $15M, introduced a 3-year holding period, and expanded eligibility — but only for stock issued after July 4, 2025, and only if structured correctly at issuance.
Everything founders, investors, employees, and advisors ask us about QSBS eligibility, attestation, and Section 1202. Can't find your answer? info@qsbsattest.com
Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) is stock in a domestic C corporation that meets the requirements of Section 1202. When you sell qualifying stock held for the required period, you may exclude up to $15M in capital gains from federal income tax entirely.
Anyone who acquires stock directly from a qualifying company at original issuance can potentially benefit — founders, co-founders, employees, angel investors, and advisors or service providers receiving equity compensation.
Yes — and this is one of the most overlooked opportunities in QSBS planning. The Section 1202 exclusion is not limited to venture-backed technology startups. Any domestic C corporation with aggregate gross assets not exceeding $75M at the time of stock issuance can potentially issue QSBS — including manufacturing companies, consumer product businesses, e-commerce operations, technology firms, and many other business types.
The key requirements are the same regardless of your business model: you must operate as a C corporation, use at least 80% of your assets in an active qualifying trade or business, and the stock must be acquired at original issuance directly from the company. Excluded industries — law, medicine, accounting, financial services, consulting, hospitality, and farming — do not qualify, but the vast majority of product and technology businesses do.
Many small business owners miss QSBS eligibility simply because they operate as an LLC or S corporation, neither of which can issue QSBS directly. Converting to a C corporation before stock is issued — or forming a new C corporation — can preserve eligibility. The planning window opens at the moment stock is issued, which is why early action matters.
No — and this is one of the most common and costly misconceptions we encounter. QSBS eligibility is determined at the individual stockholder level. Your investors' attorneys may be documenting their QSBS eligibility — but that analysis covers their shares, not yours.
As a founder, you hold stock in your own right and the IRS expects you to independently demonstrate that your shares qualify under Section 1202. Every founder, co-founder, employee, and investor who holds stock needs their own separate QSBS attestation.
No. QSBS eligibility and documentation is determined at the individual stockholder level, not at the company level. Each founder, employee, investor, and advisor needs their own independent attestation regardless of what the company or other stockholders have documented. The IRS expects each taxpayer claiming the Section 1202 exclusion to independently substantiate that their specific shares qualify.
The key requirements are: the issuing company must be a domestic C corporation; gross assets must not exceed $75M at issuance; the company must be an active qualifying business (not in an excluded industry); stock must be acquired at original issuance directly from the company; the stockholder must be a non-corporate taxpayer; and the stock must be held for at least 3 years.
Yes — definitively. An LLC that has filed IRS Form 8832 to elect C corporation tax treatment for federal income tax purposes can issue QSBS. The IRS confirmed this position in PLR 201603011. The LLC's membership interests are treated as "stock" for federal income tax purposes from the effective date of the election. All other Section 1202 requirements still apply, and the QSBS holding period begins on the Form 8832 effective date — not the filing date.
Not directly — but you can convert your entity to a C corporation and issue new QSBS-qualifying stock after the conversion. The check-the-box election (Form 8832) is treated as a Section 351 exchange, which means the 10x basis rule for QSBS applies based on the fair market value of LLC assets at the time of the election — a meaningful benefit for LLCs that have appreciated in value. We advise on entity conversion scenarios as part of our formation guidance service.
A check-the-box election (IRS Form 8832) is often preferred because it only requires a single filing and is the simplest means available to convert to C corporation tax treatment. In other cases, founders prefer it because they want to retain the governance flexibility that LLC operating agreements provide, or because the pre-conversion LLC had a complicated economic structure that the parties want to preserve in the LLC agreement rather than restating in corporate documents.
The options themselves are not QSBS — but the shares acquired upon exercise can be. When you exercise an ISO or NSO directly from the company at original issuance, the resulting shares may qualify as QSBS if all Section 1202 requirements are met at the time of exercise. Note: RSUs, phantom stock, and stock appreciation rights do not qualify as QSBS.
The QSBS holding period begins at the date of exercise, not when the option was granted. This is why early exercise combined with an 83(b) election is so valuable — it starts the clock as early as possible.
No. Several states do not conform to the federal QSBS exclusion. California — where many of our clients are based — does not conform, with a top state rate of 13.3%. Alabama, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania also do not conform. Hawaii and Massachusetts partially conform. New Jersey will conform beginning January 1, 2026.
The most common disqualifiers: operating in an excluded industry; gross assets exceeding $75M at issuance (permanently disqualifying — even if assets later dip below); certain share repurchases exceeding 2% from a specific stockholder or 5% of all shares within the specified window; stock acquired in a secondary purchase; stock held by a corporation; failing the 80% active business test (an ongoing requirement throughout the holding period); and deploying corporate capital in illiquid investments with lock-up periods greater than 24 months.
Potentially yes — it depends on the company's gross assets at the time your stock was issued. If the company's aggregate gross assets were under $75M at the time your stock was issued, that issuance may qualify regardless of what has happened to company value since. A founder's stock issued at incorporation when the company had minimal assets almost always passes the gross asset test.
The same company's stock issued to a new hire at Series B — when assets may exceed $75M — may not qualify. Every issuance requires its own separate analysis. And once aggregate gross assets have permanently exceeded $75M, the company cannot issue new QSBS even if assets later dip back below the threshold.
A QSBS attestation is a formal, written analysis confirming that your stock meets all Section 1202 requirements at the time of issuance. It is the contemporaneous documentation standard the IRS expects if your exclusion is ever challenged.
The burden of proof rests with the taxpayer. U.S. courts have held that exclusions from income must be narrowly construed and that taxpayers must bring themselves within the clear scope of the exclusion. In JU v. U.S., a taxpayer lost their entire QSBS exclusion because they could not produce financial records from the year of stock issuance. In Holmes v. Commissioner, a QSBS claim failed because substantiation consisted entirely of uncorroborated personal testimony. Management changes, company pivots, and lost records can make retroactive documentation far less persuasive to the IRS.
The ideal time is at or immediately after stock issuance — when facts are fresh, the gross asset threshold can be accurately assessed, and structural issues can still be corrected. That said, it's never too late — if you already hold stock without documented eligibility, we can assess what's possible given your specific timeline.
For a typical engagement we review the certificate of incorporation, cap table, stockholder agreements, most recent balance sheet or asset schedule, and a description of the company's business activities. For investors, we also review relevant investment documents (SAFE, note, or stock purchase agreement). We scope the document list on your first call — the process is straightforward for early-stage companies.
For most straightforward engagements, the initial eligibility analysis and attestation letter are typically completed within 3–5 business days of receiving the relevant documents. Complex situations may take longer. We confirm the expected timeline on your first call.
Some disqualifying events affect only stock issued after the triggering event — earlier issuances may remain qualified. Others, like certain share repurchases, can retroactively disqualify earlier stock. The 80% active business test is an ongoing requirement throughout the holding period — QSBS status can be lost even after the 5-year mark if the active business requirement lapses.
Catching a potential disqualifier early — before a financing round or restructuring — gives you the opportunity to structure around it. Discovering it at exit often leaves no remedy.
The 83(b) election is an IRS filing that must be submitted within 30 days of receiving unvested or restricted stock. By making the election, you start your QSBS holding period clock from the date of issuance rather than the date of vesting, and lock in the gross asset test at the time of exercise. The election applies at early exercise of options — not at the time of grant.
The 30-day window is a hard deadline — there are no exceptions and no retroactive fixes.
All services are priced as transparent flat fees — no hourly billing, no retainer surprises. You know the cost before we begin. Specific pricing is scoped on your first call based on your situation, the number of stockholders involved, and the complexity of the engagement.
We are a specialist QSBS advisory practice — QSBS is the only thing we do. Law firms and Big 4 accounting firms treat QSBS as one service among hundreds, staffing it with associates billing at general corporate rates. We've built our entire practice around QSBS analysis and attestation, delivering the same quality of work more efficiently and at a price point that reflects the actual scope of the engagement.
Yes — our ongoing compliance monitoring service is structured as an annual flat-fee engagement. It includes a yearly review of your company's QSBS compliance status, monitoring for disqualifying corporate events, and an updated attestation letter on request. Pricing is confirmed on your first call.
Yes — and this is common. We frequently work with all founders, co-founders, and key employees at a company simultaneously, producing individual attestation letters for each stockholder. Multi-stockholder engagements are priced at a per-person rate with a company-level discount.
We are a specialized financial advisory practice, not a law firm, and our services do not constitute legal advice. Our QSBS attestation letters are financial and analytical documents based on a review of the relevant facts against the requirements of Section 1202.
For legal opinions, IRS representation, or complex tax litigation involving QSBS, we work alongside qualified tax attorneys in our professional network and can refer you directly.
QSBS multiplication — also called stacking — refers to gifting QSBS to multiple eligible holders such as a spouse, family members, or non-grantor trusts before a sale, so each holder can claim their own $15M exclusion. This strategy is entirely legal and explicitly contemplated by the tax code. The recipient inherits the original holding period, so the clock does not restart.
Important: only gifts to individuals and non-grantor trusts create separate exclusions. Contributing QSBS to a family LLC, limited partnership, or grantor trust does not create a new exclusion and can disqualify the stock. Gifts must be made before any binding sale contract is in place.
For stock issued after July 4, 2025 qualifying for the Section 1202 exclusion, the excluded gain is not treated as an AMT preference item. Qualifying QSBS gains are excluded from both regular federal income tax and the AMT.
For older stock qualifying for partial exclusions (50% or 75%), the excluded portion was historically treated as an AMT preference item, creating potential AMT liability even on the "excluded" portion. If you hold partial-exclusion stock, review your AMT exposure as part of exit planning.
Section 1045 allows you to defer capital gains from the sale of QSBS by reinvesting the proceeds into a new QSBS investment within 60 days. The deferred gain is not recognized until the replacement QSBS is sold. Section 1045 applies both when exiting before the full holding period is satisfied and when your gain exceeds the applicable exclusion cap — allowing you to roll the excess into new QSBS rather than paying tax immediately.
The 60-day reinvestment window is strict — missing it makes the gain immediately taxable.
If your company is acquired in a cash sale before you've met the minimum holding period, your QSBS gains are generally taxable. A Section 1045 rollover may be available if you reinvest within 60 days.
If the acquisition is a stock-for-stock exchange structured under Sections 351 or 368, the QSBS character and holding period may carry over to replacement shares — preserving your path to the exclusion. We review acquisition scenarios as part of our exit-readiness service.
This is an unsettled area of tax law. There are tax authorities supporting the position that each spouse can separately claim the full gain exclusion cap, but there are no tax authorities expressly addressing this in the context of a claimed QSBS exclusion on a joint return. Married individuals filing separately are explicitly limited to half the standard cap under the statute. If your exit gains are large enough that this question matters materially, consult a qualified tax advisor before making planning decisions based on either interpretation.
A curated collection of QSBS articles, case law, IRS letters, and rulings. Content being added regularly — check back soon.
IRS Publication 550 is one of the IRS's most comprehensive taxpayer guidance documents — a lengthy, detailed publication covering all aspects of investment income and expenses, including dividends, interest, capital gains, installment sales, short sales, options, and bond discount rules. It is updated annually and serves as the IRS's primary plain-language guidance for individual investors navigating the federal tax treatment of investment activity.
For QSBS purposes, the relevant discussion appears in Chapter 4 — Sales and Trades of Investment Property, under the section titled "Qualified Small Business Stock." This section outlines the conditions under which a taxpayer may exclude gain from the sale of QSBS under Section 1202, including the requirements for the issuing corporation, the original issuance rule, the active business requirement, and the gross asset threshold. While Publication 550 does not substitute for a careful reading of Section 1202 itself, it provides a useful and accessible starting point for understanding how the IRS characterizes and applies the exclusion in the context of an individual taxpayer's return.
Publication 550 is available in both HTML and PDF formats directly from the IRS. Taxpayers and advisors working on QSBS questions should confirm they are reading the most current edition, as the publication is revised annually to reflect legislative and regulatory changes.
This case involved a taxpayer who attempted to claim the Section 1202 exclusion but failed due to insufficient historical evidence.
The conflict: The taxpayer acquired stock in 2003 but provided only financial records from 2009 to 2011 to substantiate the company's gross asset size at the time of issuance.
The court's ruling: Even though the company's aggregate gross assets were only $2.15 million in 2009 — well under the $50M threshold — the court ruled that these later records were not "credible evidence" of the company's assets in 2003, the year the stock was issued.
The outcome: Because the taxpayer could not prove the corporation met the gross asset test at the exact time of issuance six years earlier, the entire QSBS claim was rejected.
This case centered on Ralph Holmes, who attempted to use a Section 1045 election to roll over gains from a QSBS sale into replacement stock.
The conflict: Holmes's evidence for his QSBS status relied almost entirely on his own uncorroborated testimony, which the Tax Court found to be "self-serving" and lacking credibility.
Three core failures:
1. Original issuance: Holmes could not prove he acquired the stock directly from the company rather than from a third party. Documentary proof — such as stock certificates or stock purchase agreements — was absent.
2. Gross asset test: He provided no financial statements proving the company was under the $50M threshold on the 36 separate dates he purchased stock. The court required proof for each individual purchase date.
3. Active business test: Holmes offered no records showing that at least 80% of corporate assets were used in a qualified trade or business during his holding period. Annual financial statements and board records would have been the expected form of evidence.
The outcome: The court denied QSBS status and the IRS successfully imposed a 20% substantial understatement penalty on top of the full tax liability.
This ruling addressed whether a pharmaceutical company that helped clients commercialize experimental drugs was a "qualified trade or business" under Section 1202(e)(3), despite operating in a field often associated with health services.
The IRS's analysis: The IRS concluded the company was not performing services in the health field because its activities involved deploying specific manufacturing assets and intellectual property to create value for customers, rather than offering individual expertise the way a healthcare provider would.
The outcome: As a result, the company's pharmaceutical R&D work fell outside the statutory exclusion for "health" businesses and qualified as an eligible trade or business for QSBS purposes.
This ruling examined whether a company that developed a tool allowing healthcare providers to receive diagnostic information more rapidly was performing services in the "health" field under Section 1202(e)(3), which would have disqualified it as a qualified trade or business.
The IRS's analysis: The IRS focused on the fact that the company's technology tested for specific diseases and the results were analyzed and summarized in laboratory reports that did not diagnose or recommend treatment — the company never gave a patient a diagnosis or treatment recommendation directly.
The outcome: Because the company's value came from its patented testing technology and the resulting reports rather than from direct patient care or clinical judgment, the IRS concluded it was engaged in a qualified trade or business and was not excluded under the health-services category.
This ruling addressed whether an insurance agent/broker that worked with customers to obtain various kinds of insurance, including property, casualty, surety, workers' compensation, employee benefits, personal and medical, and professional practice insurance, was performing "brokerage services" — an excluded activity under Section 1202(e)(3) — and therefore disqualified as a qualified trade or business.
The IRS's analysis: The IRS referred to the dictionary definition of "brokerage services" and determined the term would only apply to a company serving as a mere intermediary facilitating a transaction between two parties.
The outcome: Because the company's contracts with insurance companies required it to perform additional administrative services such as reporting, recordkeeping, and claims investigation, adjustment, and settlement — well beyond simply connecting a buyer and seller — the IRS ruled it was not engaged in brokerage services and could issue QSBS.
This ruling examined whether a medical technology company that developed and commercialized software to assist doctors in providing medical treatment to individual patients, with the goal of making treatment more effective by optimizing a patient's use of medical treatment or medication, was performing services in the health field under Section 1202(e)(3).
The IRS's analysis: The IRS reasoned that the company "was not in the business of providing health services but rather creating an asset to be utilized by their customers in the healthcare industry."
The outcome: The ruling also confirmed the company did not provide value in the form of individual expertise, since the software itself — not any individual employee's reputation or skill — was the asset customers relied on.
This ruling addressed whether an enterprise cloud application software company, whose business was to provide software solutions tailored to the needs of its clients, was a disqualified trade or business under Section 1202(e)(3)(A) because its principal asset was the reputation or skill of one or more of its employees rather than the company itself.
The IRS's analysis: The company's employees possessed special technical skills and knowledge used to develop and implement the software solutions, but those skills came from training on the company's own proprietary processes and methodology packages, and new employees could be trained to perform the same work as any other employee.
The outcome: Because the skills were specific to the company's own IP rather than to any individual's personal reputation or expertise, the IRS concluded the company's principal asset was its intellectual property — the training processes and packages it used to develop its workforce — not the reputation or skill of any particular person.
This ruling addressed whether stock received in a divisive "D" reorganization — where a qualified small business contributed part of its business to a "controlled" corporation that was then distributed to shareholders in a split-off — retained QSBS status.
The IRS's analysis: Based on the taxpayer's representations that a portion of the original company's stock was qualified small business stock, the IRS ruled that a proportionate amount of the controlled corporation's stock received in exchange for that original QSBS would itself be treated as qualified small business stock under Section 1202(h)(4)(A).
The outcome: Critically, the holding period for the new stock included the holding period the shareholder had already accumulated in the original QSBS, allowing the two periods to be "tacked" together toward the five-year requirement rather than restarting the clock.
These five companion rulings, issued the same day to related taxpayers, addressed whether a corporation's QSBS-eligible stock survived an "F" reorganization in which the issuing C corporation was converted into an LLC that elected to be taxed as a C corporation for federal tax purposes.
The IRS's analysis: In each ruling, the IRS concluded that the status of the stock as QSBS was unaffected by the conversion of the issuing corporation into an LLC for state-law purposes, since the entity remained a C corporation for federal income tax purposes throughout.
The outcome: This confirmed that an LLC that has "checked the box" under the Section 7701 Treasury Regulations is eligible to issue QSBS, and its equity owners are eligible to claim Section 1202's gain exclusion — the state-law label "LLC" does not itself disqualify the stock, so long as the entity's federal tax classification is a C corporation.
These three rulings address requests for an extension of time to make a late Section 1045 election under Treasury Regulations §301.9100-1 through §301.9100-3, which allow the IRS to excuse a missed regulatory election if the taxpayer acted reasonably and in good faith and the government's interests won't be prejudiced.
The granted request: In PLR 200521021, the taxpayer sold QSBS and reinvested in new QSBS within 60 days, but the accountants simply failed to recognize that the gain could be deferred under §1045 — since the request came before any IRS audit and the taxpayer otherwise qualified for the deferral, the IRS granted the extension and allowed an amended return.
The denied requests: In PLR 200604004, the taxpayer could not demonstrate reliance on a return preparer's advice in failing to make the election. In PLR 200906009, the taxpayer sought the late election only after the IRS had already commenced an audit, and only after the IRS had separately found the taxpayer's reported capital losses and zero-gain positions unsubstantiated — both were denied.
This ruling addressed whether a company's stock retained QSBS status after a series of name changes and an entity conversion from an LLC to a C corporation, where the company had no formal stock certificates issued during the LLC phase of its existence.
The IRS's analysis: The company had originally been a C corporation, then changed its name and made an entity classification election so the entity would continue to be taxed as a C corporation, before later converting all of the taxpayers' interests into the final C corporation. Citing Section 1202(h), which treats stock received in a Section 368 reorganization as QSBS acquired on the date the original exchanged stock was acquired, and Section 368(a)(1)(F)'s definition of a reorganization as a "mere change in identity, form, or place of organization," the IRS found the conversion did not disrupt QSBS status.
The outcome: The IRS ruled that the membership interest in the LLC, even though taxed as a C corporation, was treated as QSBS, with the holding period starting on the date the membership interest was originally acquired. The ruling distinguished between ownership of a corporation, which is tied to stock, and ownership of an LLC, which is tied to a membership interest rather than formal stock — but concluded the distinction didn't matter for federal tax purposes.
This ruling addressed whether a company providing interim staffing and executive search services, matching skilled managers and executives with client staffing needs, was disqualified as a "consulting" business or as one whose principal asset was the reputation or skill of its employees under Section 1202(e)(3) — despite the fact that the company used the term "consulting" in its own marketing materials and had built an excellent reputation for supplying highly qualified temporary employees.
The IRS's analysis: The IRS looked past that marketing language to the underlying legal relationships between the company and its customers, finding that the company primarily facilitated placements based on client-identified needs rather than professional judgment, with clients controlling the work direction, supervision, and quality review of the placed staff — distancing the company from true consulting.
The outcome: The IRS concluded the company was not engaged in consulting services or in a business where the principal asset was the reputation or skill of one or more of its employees, and was therefore a qualified trade or business eligible for QSBS treatment.
This ruling examined whether a testing company that performed diagnostic tests by physician order, with no direct contact with patients, was performing services in the health field under Section 1202(e)(3).
The IRS's analysis: As in PLR 201717010, the IRS focused on the absence of any clinical relationship between the company and the patient — the company's role was limited to running the test itself rather than diagnosing a condition or recommending a course of treatment, and its employees were not healthcare professionals exercising medical judgment.
The outcome: The IRS concluded the company was engaged in a qualified trade or business rather than the excluded field of health, since its value came from performing a defined testing service rather than from clinical expertise applied directly to a patient.
We founded QSBS Attest because we saw firsthand how often founders and investors leave millions in QSBS exclusions on the table — not through bad decisions, but through a lack of accessible, affordable, specialist guidance at the right moment.
We bring over 30 years of corporate finance and financial advisory experience to QSBS advisory work — including direct experience as a founding CFO at an early-stage consumer packaged goods startup. That hands-on experience gives us a perspective most QSBS advisors don't have: we know what it's like to be on the other side of the table, making entity formation decisions under time pressure while managing every other priority that comes with building a company from scratch.
Our principal holds a B.S. in Applied Economics and Business Management from Cornell University and an MBA in Finance from the University of Southern California. A 30-year career spanning corporate finance and financial advisory has included company formations, capital raises, M&A transactions, and liquidity events — providing pattern recognition across the full startup lifecycle that most founders and investors are navigating for the first time.
One of the most consistent blind spots we've seen: founders who assume QSBS compliance is something their investors' lawyers are handling — and discover at exit that their own shares were never independently documented. Founder stock and investor stock are treated separately under Section 1202. Each requires its own analysis and attestation. We built QSBS Attest to be the specialist who catches these gaps early — before they become irreversible, and before they cost you millions.
We work alongside a trusted network of CPAs, tax attorneys, corporate lawyers, and venture investors. When your situation calls for expertise beyond QSBS, we connect you with the right specialist directly.
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