CCPC vs public-company stock options
Stock options give you the right to buy shares at a fixed strike price. The gap between strike and market value is where all the money — and all the tax complexity — lives. In Canada, the single biggest variable is whether your employer is a CCPC (Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation) or not.
The common foundation
For any employee option, the benefit (market value at exercise − strike) is taxed as employment income. The crucial relief is the 50% stock-option deduction: if conditions are met, only half the benefit is taxed — the same effective rate as a capital gain.
Public / non-CCPC options (incl. US parent companies)
- Taxed at exercise. The benefit hits your income in the year you exercise — even if you don’t sell a single share. That’s the dangerous part: tax due now, possibly with no cash from the shares.
- 50% deduction generally applies if the strike was ≥ the share’s value at grant and the shares are ordinary common shares.
- The $200,000 cap. For employees of large, established firms, options that vest in a year above $200,000 (valued at grant) are no longer eligible for the 50% deduction — the full benefit is taxed as income. (Rules effective July 1, 2021; CCPCs and smaller companies are exempt from the cap.)
CCPC options — the startup advantage
If your employer is a CCPC, the rules are far friendlier:
- Tax is deferred to sale, not exercise. This solves the cash-flow problem entirely — you don’t owe until you actually have liquidity.
- 50% deduction if you hold the shares ≥ 2 years, available even if the strike was below the grant-date value (a CCPC-only path to the deduction).
- The LCGE. If the shares are Qualified Small Business Corporation shares and you hold them ≥ 24 months, gains may be exempt up to the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (about $1.25M as of 2024). This is the Canadian equivalent of the US QSBS exclusion and can shelter a life-changing amount.
The AMT trap
Quick comparison
| Public / non-CCPC | CCPC | |
|---|---|---|
| When taxed | At exercise (even if you hold) | Deferred to sale |
| 50% deduction | If strike ≥ grant value; capped at $200k/yr vesting | If shares held ≥ 2 yrs (even if strike < grant) |
| LCGE on growth | No | Possible, if QSBC shares held ≥ 24 mo |
| Main risk | Tax due with no liquidity; AMT | Illiquidity / valuation; AMT |
Strategies worth knowing
- Mind the exercise timing. For public-company options, exercising spreads the income into the year you choose — coordinate it with low-income years and the AMT thresholds.
- For CCPC shares, protect the LCGE. Hold ≥ 24 months and keep the company “QSBC-pure” (watch passive assets). Purification before a sale is a real planning lever — get advice early.
- Plan for the cash. Non-CCPC exercise creates a tax bill before you can sell. Know where the cash comes from.
Don’t do this from a blog post
Option and AMT planning is the single most consequential calculation in tech comp, and it’s genuinely individual. Model it with real numbers — or get help — before you write a cheque to exercise.
Next: the easy win most people leave on the table — ESPP.