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Column · TX · Pre-IPO

Column pre-IPO equity planning in Texas

Column (Fintech, late-stage) employees who live or work in Texas: tender offer timing, federal AMT on ISO exercises, and no-state-tax considerations for the liquidity event.

Where Column sits today

Column is a late-stage Fintech company headquartered in CA. No confirmed active secondary market; liquidity typically waits for an IPO or acquisition.

What Texas residency changes

Texas has no state wage income tax. A Column liquidity event while you're a Texas resident means federal-only exposure (up to 37% on RSU settlement plus 3.8% NIIT on capital gains). That's a meaningful structural advantage compared with CA or NY residents.

QSBS and Texas

Texas has no state income tax, so QSBS treatment applies only at the federal level. Section 1202 exclusion produces the full benefit here with no state claw-back.

Moves to make before the liquidity event

Adopt a 10b5-1 plan during the last open window before Column's S-1 (90-day cooling-off for non-officers, 120 days for officers/directors). Model federal AMT before any ISO exercise. Maximize after-tax 401(k) contributions in the months before IPO, while your ordinary income is still at the pre-IPO baseline. A move into a high-tax state before IPO will cost you meaningfully on the equity vest; stay in Texas through the settlement year if possible.

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