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RSUs - what to do?

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In 2017, I was awarded RSUs from my US company at a price of $80 (33 shares are granted per year over 4 years) and they are now worth $220.

To date, I haven't done anything with the shares so I am trying to figure out what my next steps are. According to my payslips, I didn't pay any taxes on these shares (yet) although I do receive 1042-S form.

If I was to sell 45 units today, what taxes would I be liable for? I am UK and in 40% tax rate bracket. I saw this thread and a few others in the forum but am none the wiser!

What are the implications of selling them now? Should I wait till next year when all shares are fully granted?

Many thanks in advance!

Comments

  • Sorry, a follow up question: Does selling shares fall under the personal tax allowance?
  • EdSwippet
    EdSwippet Posts: 1,663 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    If I was to sell 45 units today, what taxes would I be liable for? I am UK and in 40% tax rate bracket. I saw this thread and a few others in the forum but am none the wiser!
    Your cost for these 45 shares should come to 45 x $80 multiplied by the USD/GBP rate in effect at the date you received these shares. Your sale price is whatever you sell these 45 shares for, multiplied by the USD/GBP rate in effect on date of sale.

    Your capital gain is the difference between these two. You pay tax on capital gains to the extent that your total gain for the year exceeds £12,300 (2020/21 CGT allowance), at 10% if in basic rate tax, 20% if in higher rate tax.
    According to my payslips, I didn't pay any taxes on these shares (yet) although I do receive 1042-S form.
    This is unusual, and you should check it. My understanding of things is that UK companies are required to treat US RSUs as PAYE salary, so subject to both income tax and NI withholding. Just as if the company paid you the cash instead, then.
    What are the implications of selling them now? Should I wait till next year when all shares are fully granted?
    Implications of selling at any point, either now or later, are as above: potential capital gains tax liability. Selling gradually over several tax years will maximise your use of the capital gains tax allowance, and minimise or ideally eliminate any capital gains tax liability.

    Based on the numbers you gave, your capital gain here on sale of 45 shares might be perhaps somewhere on the order of £5k, so likely well within a single year's capital gains tax allowance (assuming no other gains). Your full allocation is 132 shares. At today's prices, selling 132 shares in a single chunk would put you over a single year's capital gains tax allowance. (Of course, the future share price won't be today's price, it'll be either higher or lower.)
    Does selling shares fall under the personal tax allowance?
    No. There's a separate capital gains tax allowance. See above.

  • Thank you, @EdSwippet for your helpful post - this is very much appreciated and consider me educated! :)
  • jimmo
    jimmo Posts: 2,287 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper

    Are you sure the shares are yours to sell?

    Normally with US employers and RSUs there is a "vesting day" when some or all of the shares become yours. On that day you have to pay Income Tax (and NICs) on the difference between the vesting day market value of the shares and what you paid for them.

    If the shares haven't vested yet that would explain why you haven't paid Income Tax yet. Then it becomes more complicated. Take a look at this.

    https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/discussion/comment/77755101#Comment_77755101


  • jimmo said:

    Are you sure the shares are yours to sell?

    Normally with US employers and RSUs there is a "vesting day" when some or all of the shares become yours. On that day you have to pay Income Tax (and NICs) on the difference between the vesting day market value of the shares and what you paid for them.

    If the shares haven't vested yet that would explain why you haven't paid Income Tax yet. Then it becomes more complicated. Take a look at this.

    https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/discussion/comment/77755101#Comment_77755101


    I think so, yes:


    Although I am not sure why I have $0.00 for vested market value for 99 vested RSUs...
    Also looking at the history statements, I see "Tax Withholding" which is paid (around $2) per quarter, is this something that they put aside to go towards paying tax?
  • EdSwippet
    EdSwippet Posts: 1,663 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    moneysaver1978 said:
    Although I am not sure why I have $0.00 for vested market value for 99 vested RSUs...
    No idea either. At least, assuming you haven't already sold these shares (or had the broker or company auto-sell them for you somehow -- some companies offer this feature). All I can suggest is to check with your broker.

    moneysaver1978 said:
    Also looking at the history statements, I see "Tax Withholding" which is paid (around $2) per quarter, is this something that they put aside to go towards paying tax?
    This sounds like US dividend tax withholding, which is 15% under the US/UK treaty, assuming you have a W-8BEN on file with the broker. Do these shares pay dividends, to the value of $13/quarter ($52/year) or so to you? A look at your annual 1042-S should confirm this. Box 1 'Income code' contains '06'? That's definitely an indication that the broker thinks you own some shares.

    As for UK tax on this ... you would need to declare this $52 or whatever dividend for UK tax, but can claim up 15% of it as a foreign tax credit, limited by your actual UK tax liability on these dividends (which would be £0 if under the annual dividend tax allowance).
  • EdSwippet said:
    moneysaver1978 said:
    Although I am not sure why I have $0.00 for vested market value for 99 vested RSUs...
    No idea either. At least, assuming you haven't already sold these shares (or had the broker or company auto-sell them for you somehow -- some companies offer this feature). All I can suggest is to check with your broker.

    moneysaver1978 said:
    Also looking at the history statements, I see "Tax Withholding" which is paid (around $2) per quarter, is this something that they put aside to go towards paying tax?
    This sounds like US dividend tax withholding, which is 15% under the US/UK treaty, assuming you have a W-8BEN on file with the broker. Do these shares pay dividends, to the value of $13/quarter ($52/year) or so to you? A look at your annual 1042-S should confirm this. Box 1 'Income code' contains '06'? That's definitely an indication that the broker thinks you own some shares.

    As for UK tax on this ... you would need to declare this $52 or whatever dividend for UK tax, but can claim up 15% of it as a foreign tax credit, limited by your actual UK tax liability on these dividends (which would be £0 if under the annual dividend tax allowance).
    Thank you! I do have W-8BEN and get dividends but it seems the broker's website is down so will have a look again later and confirm.
  • sausage_time
    sausage_time Posts: 1,482 Ambassador
    Tenth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 26 November 2020 at 10:13AM
    jimmo said:

    Are you sure the shares are yours to sell?

    Normally with US employers and RSUs there is a "vesting day" when some or all of the shares become yours. On that day you have to pay Income Tax (and NICs) on the difference between the vesting day market value of the shares and what you paid for them.

    If the shares haven't vested yet that would explain why you haven't paid Income Tax yet. Then it becomes more complicated. Take a look at this.

    https://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/discussion/comment/77755101#Comment_77755101


    I think so, yes:


    Although I am not sure why I have $0.00 for vested market value for 99 vested RSUs...
    Also looking at the history statements, I see "Tax Withholding" which is paid (around $2) per quarter, is this something that they put aside to go towards paying tax?
    That looks a lot like Schwab, which is the broker my employer uses.  For what it is worth, my Vested Market Value also shows as $0.  Can you see the 99 vested shares somewhere?  My setup is that there is separate brokerage account that the shares get deposited in when vested.  If I click on Accounts/Summary I can see the Employee Stock account and the Brokerage account - but that may just be the way it was set up for us. 
    You should be able to sell the 99 now, and the remaining 34 next year.  As above, unless you have other gains there won't be CGT (gain is usually calculated as selling market prices minus price at vesting, so not the total value).
    When you come to transfer, as Schwab to do the conversion to UKP - high street bank generally give a poor rate and sometime charge too. If you sell now, you could hold the cash until the remaining shares vest and so just pay one wire fee.
    I’m a Forum Ambassador and I support the Forum Team on the Credit CardsSavings & investments, and Budgeting & Bank Accounts boards. If you need any help on these boards, do let me know. Please note that Ambassadors are not moderators. Any posts you spot in breach of the Forum Rules should be reported via the report button, or by emailing forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com.
    All views are my own and not the official line of MoneySavingExpert.
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