I exercised ISO in 2016 and sold them in 2017 (<12 months), selling below the exercise FMV. As I understand it, my ordinary income for 2017 regular tax with respect to these stocks should be calculated from my 2017 sell price. However on the 2017 W-2 I received, the income was calculated with the spread on my exercise (using the FMV at the time of exercise in 2016). How do I report/reconcile the difference between the W-2 I received and the actual disqualified disposition ordinary income?
My situation is similar to #3 in the following link:
https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tips/investments-and-taxes/incentive-stock-options/L4azWgfwy
with the main difference that my W-2 showed my bargain element as opposed to actual gain.
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qualified or non qualified ISO?
Qualified Incentive Stock Options
An ISO that is "qualified" allows you to escape personal taxation of any profit made in the exercising and subsequent sale of the ISOs. This comes in the form of two separate tax savings. At the point the option is exercised, you are exempt from paying tax on the gain between the option-grant price -- when the option was issued -- and the time-of-exercise value of the stock. Secondly, at the time you sell the stock, the profit on the sale qualifies for taxation as a long-term capital gain, usually a lower rate than personal income.
Non-Qualified Incentive Stock Options.
Incentive stock options disqualified from tax savings may take a double hit. The spread between issue and exercise prices is taxed at your regular income rate in the year of exercising. For example, an option for 100 shares at $20 per share will cost you $2,000 to exercise. If stock currently trades at $25 a share, you are taxed on the $500 spread as though it were income. The same is true if you sell your stock within a year of exercising. Twelve months after the date of exercising it becomes taxed as a capital gain.
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