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June 12, 2026 12 min read

How to Read a Stock Option Grant Letter (2026 Guide)

Your stock option grant explained line by line. Learn what every term means and what to watch for before signing.

You just received your stock option grant letter. It's full of legal terms like "strike price," "vesting schedule," and "exercise window." What does it all mean? And more importantly, is this a good deal?

This guide explains every term in your stock option grant letter, shows you what to watch for, and helps you understand the actual value of your equity compensation.

Quick Tip
Use our Startup Offer Red Flag Scanner to automatically check your stock option grant for 30+ potential issues.

What is a Stock Option Grant Letter?

A stock option grant letter is a legal document that outlines the terms of your stock option award. It's typically issued by your company after you've been hired or as part of a promotion. This document specifies:

This document matters because it determines the actual value of your equity. A generous-sounding offer can be worth far less if the terms are unfavorable.

Anatomy of a Stock Option Grant Letter

Let's break down each section of a typical stock option grant letter:

1. Number of Options Granted

What it looks like
"You are granted 10,000 options to purchase shares of Common Stock..."

This is the total number of options you're receiving. Sounds straightforward, but there are two important nuances:

2. Strike Price (Exercise Price)

What it looks like
"Exercise Price: $1.25 per share"

The strike price is what you'll pay to exercise your options and purchase shares. This is typically set at the fair market value of the common stock on your grant date.

Lower strike prices are better. Here's why:

That's a 44% difference in your take-home payoff from a "small" change in strike price.

3. Vesting Schedule

What it looks like
"4-year vesting with monthly vesting commencing on Grant Date"

The vesting schedule determines when you actually earn the right to exercise your options. The standard is:

Red Flag
Watch for: Backloaded vesting (you vest less in early years and more later), quarterly vesting (less favorable), or cliff periods longer than 1 year.

4. Exercise Window

What it looks like
"Options must be exercised within 90 days of termination of employment"

The exercise window is how long you have to exercise your vested options after leaving the company. This is a critical term:

Critical Term
A 90-day exercise window means you must pay to exercise your options within 3 months of leaving—or lose them. This can create a tax burden before you have any liquidity.

5. Early Exercise Options

What it looks like
"You may elect to early exercise your options prior to vesting"

Early exercise allows you to exercise options before they vest. This is extremely valuable for tax reasons:

Early exercise is typically only offered to early employees or founders.

6. Vesting Acceleration

What it looks like
"Single-trigger acceleration: 100% of unvested options accelerate upon Change of Control"

Acceleration clauses determine what happens to your unvested options if the company is acquired:

7. Repurchase Right

What it looks like
"Company has right of first refusal to repurchase shares upon termination"

This clause gives the company the right to buy back your unvested shares if you leave—typically at the lower of your purchase price or fair market value. This is standard but worth noting.

Sample Stock Option Grant Letter (Annotated)

Here's what a typical stock option grant looks like with annotations:

STOCK OPTION GRANT NOTICE

Grantee: Alex Chen
Grant Date: June 15, 2026
Type of Option: Incentive Stock Option (ISO) ← Qualified for special tax treatment
Number of Options: 10,000 ← Your total grant
Exercise Price: $1.25 per share ← Set at FMV on grant date
Vesting: 4 years, 1-year cliff, monthly vesting ← Standard schedule

Exercise Window: 90 days after termination ← Forces quick decision
Early Exercise: Permitted ← Valuable tax benefit
Acceleration: Double-trigger, 50% ← Some protection on acquisition

[...legal terms about transfer, withholding, etc...]

Red Flags to Watch For

When reviewing your stock option grant, watch for these warning signs:

ISOs vs. NSOs

Your grant letter will specify whether you're receiving Incentive Stock Options (ISOs) or Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs):

Most employees receive a mix or NSOs if the ISO limit is exceeded.

What to Do Before You Sign

  1. Understand the numbers: Calculate your potential payout at different exit scenarios using our Startup Exit Calculator
  2. Check the strike price: Ask how it was determined and compare to recent funding rounds
  3. Clarify vague terms: Ask about any language you don't understand
  4. Negotiate if needed: Some terms (like strike price) are rarely negotiable, but others (like acceleration or exercise window) might be
  5. Run a scan: Use our Offer Red Flag Scanner to automatically check for issues

Calculate Your Option Value

See what your stock options could be worth at different exit prices with our free calculators.

Try the Exit Calculator

📊 Stock Options Value Report — Exit Scenarios & More

Calculate what your stock options are worth today and at exit. Get 4 exit scenarios, vesting timeline, benchmark verdict, and PDF report.

Get My Options Report (Free) →

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I negotiate my stock option grant?

Strike price is usually non-negotiable (set by 409A valuation). However, you might negotiate for: a higher number of options, longer exercise window, better acceleration terms, or early exercise rights.

What happens if I leave before my cliff?

You forfeit all unvested options. You keep any vested options, but must exercise them within the exercise window (typically 90 days) or lose them.

Should I early exercise my options?

If early exercise is offered, it's usually advantageous for tax reasons. You can file an 83(b) election to pay taxes now (when value is low) and avoid higher taxes later. Consult a tax professional.

What's the difference between options and RSUs?

Options give you the right to buy shares at a fixed price. RSUs are granted as actual shares that vest over time. RSUs don't have a strike price but are taxed as income when they vest.

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