Equity Calculator
Calculate your ownership percentage, current equity value, and track your vesting progress in real-time.
Vesting Progress Visualization
Green represents vested equity; Grey represents unvested equity.
Vesting Schedule Projection
| Year | Vesting Status | Cumulative Shares | Estimated Value |
|---|
Note: This table assumes a linear monthly vesting after the cliff period.
What is an Equity Calculator?
An Equity Calculator is a specialized financial tool designed to help startup founders, early employees, and investors understand the true value of their ownership stake. In the complex world of Startup Equity, simply knowing the number of shares you own isn't enough. You need to understand how those shares relate to the total pool, how they vest over time, and what they are worth based on the company's current Valuation.
Who should use an Equity Calculator? Anyone receiving Stock Options or restricted stock units (RSUs) as part of their compensation package. It is particularly useful during job offer negotiations or when a company undergoes a new funding round that might cause Dilution. Many people hold misconceptions that equity is "free money," but it is actually a long-term incentive subject to specific rules and market conditions.
Equity Calculator Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The math behind an Equity Calculator involves several layers of calculation, from basic percentages to time-based vesting logic.
1. Ownership Percentage
The fundamental formula for ownership is:
Ownership % = (Individual Shares / Total Shares Outstanding) × 100
2. Equity Value
To find the dollar value of that ownership:
Equity Value = Ownership % × Company Valuation
3. Vesting Logic
Vesting determines how many shares you actually "own" at a given point in time. If a Cliff Period exists, no shares vest until that milestone is reached. After the cliff, shares typically vest monthly or quarterly.
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Shares | Total pool of issued shares | Count | 1M – 50M |
| Owned Shares | Shares granted to the user | Count | 1,000 – 500,000 |
| Valuation | Current market value of company | USD ($) | $1M – $1B+ |
| Vesting Period | Time to earn 100% of shares | Years | 3 – 5 Years |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: The Early Engineer
Imagine an engineer joining a Seed-stage startup. They are granted 20,000 shares out of a total 2,000,000. The company is valued at $10 million. Using the Equity Calculator, we see:
- Ownership: (20,000 / 2,000,000) = 1%
- Total Value: 1% of $10M = $100,000
- Vesting: With a 4-year vest and 1-year cliff, after 2 years, they have vested 50% ($50,000 value).
Example 2: Post-Series A Dilution
A founder owns 500,000 shares in a company with 1,000,000 total shares (50%). The company raises a Series A, issuing 500,000 new shares to investors. The total shares become 1,500,000. The Equity Calculator shows the founder's new ownership is 33.3%, illustrating the impact of Dilution despite the share count remaining the same.
How to Use This Equity Calculator
- Enter Total Shares: Look at your grant notice or the company's Cap Table to find the fully diluted share count.
- Input Your Grant: Enter the specific number of Stock Options or shares you were awarded.
- Set Valuation: Use the post-money valuation from the most recent funding round.
- Define Vesting: Standard is usually 4 years with a 1-year cliff.
- Adjust Time: Move the "Time Elapsed" slider to see how much you have earned to date.
- Analyze Results: Review the chart and table to plan your financial future and understand potential exit scenarios.
Key Factors That Affect Equity Calculator Results
- Company Valuation: The most volatile factor. A "unicorn" valuation makes small percentages worth millions, while a down-round can slash value.
- Dilution: Every time a company raises money or expands the option pool, your percentage ownership decreases.
- Vesting Schedule: The Vesting Schedule dictates your "golden handcuffs." Leaving before the cliff means walking away with zero.
- Liquidation Preference: Investors often get paid first. In a low-value exit, common shareholders might receive nothing even if the Equity Calculator shows a positive value.
- Exercise Price: For Stock Options, you must pay to "buy" the shares. Your actual profit is (Market Value – Exercise Price).
- Tax Implications: Depending on the type of equity (ISOs, NSOs, RSUs), taxes can significantly impact your take-home value.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Typically, if you leave before the 1-year cliff, you forfeit 100% of your equity grant. The Equity Calculator will show 0 vested shares in this scenario.
This specific Equity Calculator provides gross value. Net value depends on your local tax jurisdiction and the type of equity held.
It includes all issued shares plus all shares that could be issued (options, warrants, convertible notes). Always use this for accurate ownership math.
A down round reduces the company Valuation, which directly lowers the "Estimated Equity Value" in the calculator, even if your share count stays the same.
Yes, the Equity Calculator works for RSUs. For RSUs, the "Exercise Price" is effectively zero.
The industry standard for Startup Equity is a 4-year vesting period with a 1-year cliff and monthly vesting thereafter.
This information is usually found in the company's Cap Table. If you are an employee, you may need to ask your HR or Finance department.
Options give you the right to buy shares at a fixed price, while shares represent actual ownership. The Equity Calculator treats both as ownership units for value estimation.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Startup Equity Guide – A comprehensive guide to understanding founder and employee equity.
- Stock Options Explained – Learn the difference between ISOs and NSOs.
- Vesting Schedule Modeler – Deep dive into different vesting structures.
- Dilution Calculator – See how future funding rounds will impact your stake.
- Company Valuation Methods – How startups are valued at different stages.
- Cap Table Management – Tools for founders to manage their equity pool.