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  ⬤ GAAP  |  Stock-Based Compensation

ASC 718 Explained: A Practical Guide to Expensing Stock Compensation Under U.S. GAAP

Everything U.S. private and public companies need to know about measuring, recognizing, and disclosing share-based payments with worked examples, comparison tables, and the valuation models that drive the numbers.

ASC 718 Floating Document Card — Countsure

FASB · TOPIC 718

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What Is ASC 718?

ASC 718 is the U.S. GAAP standard that tells companies how to put a dollar value on the equity they grant to employees and certain non-employees  and then how to spread that expense across the income statement over the period the recipient earns it.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issues U.S. accounting guidance through the Accounting Standards Codification, a topical library where every standard sits under a numbered topic. Topic 718 is the one that deals with compensation paid in stock rather than cash  stock options, restricted stock units (RSUs), restricted stock awards, employee stock purchase plans, performance shares, and similar equity instruments.

Plain-English Definition

ASC 718 requires a company to recognize the grant-date fair value of every share-based award as compensation expense, recognized over the period the recipient must work (or perform) to earn it. It applies to public companies, private companies, and even certain non-employee grants.

Before this standard existed (under its predecessor FAS 123R, codified into ASC 718 in 2009), companies could simply disclose stock compensation in a footnote without hitting the income statement. The result was financial statements that looked far healthier than reality especially in tech, where equity is often the single largest form of pay. ASC 718 closed that loophole by demanding that the cost of equity sit on the income statement alongside salaries and wages.

Who falls under ASC 718?

  • Public companies – mandatory from the day the standard was issued; SEC filings depend on it.
  • Private companies with audited GAAP financials – required the moment an audit, lender covenant, or institutional investor asks for GAAP-compliant statements.
  • Pre-revenue startups – technically required, though most defer formal expensing until they raise priced rounds, prepare for an audit, or approach an IPO.
  • Companies granting equity to non-employees – consultants, advisors, and contractors; ASC 2018-07 conformed these grants to the employee model.

Why ASC 718 Matters to Founders, CFOs, and Investors

ASC 718 isn’t just an accounting hurdle  it shapes how investors read a company, how auditors sign off, and how owners report taxes. Five reasons it sits at the top of the finance team’s checklist:

01

True Cost Visibility

Equity is real compensation. Without ASC 718, a company that pays its team partly in stock looks artificially profitable. The standard forces the cost into the open.

02

Audit & IPO Readiness

Auditors will not issue a clean opinion on GAAP financials without proper ASC 718 expensing. The same is true for any S-1 or registration statement.

03

Investor Diligence

Series A and later investors expect stock-based compensation as a line item. Missing or sloppy 718 records often trigger valuation cuts or hold-back clauses.

04

Tax Coordination

ASC 718 interacts with ASC 740 (income taxes) on deferred tax assets, excess tax benefits, and the windfall/shortfall mechanics that flow through the P&L.

05

Comparability

Standardized rules let analysts compare two companies on equal footing critical when stock comp can range from 5% to 40% of total operating expense.

06

Regulatory Defense

Mis-stated stock comp is a frequent SEC restatement trigger. Getting ASC 718 right is the cheapest insurance against an enforcement action.

The Six Subtopics That Make Up ASC 718

ASC 718 isn’t just an accounting hurdle  it shapes how investors read a company, how auditors sign off, and how owners report taxes. Five reasons it sits at the top of the finance team’s checklist:

ASC 718-10
Overall

Equity is real compensation. Without ASC 718, a company that pays its team partly in stock looks artificially profitable. The standard forces the cost into the open.

ASC 718-20
Awards Classified as Equity

Auditors will not issue a clean opinion on GAAP financials without proper ASC 718 expensing. The same is true for any S-1 or registration statement.

ASC 718-30
Awards Classified as Liabilities

Series A and later investors expect stock-based compensation as a line item. Missing or sloppy 718 records often trigger valuation cuts or hold-back clauses.

ASC 718-40
Employee Stock Ownership Plans

ASC 718 interacts with ASC 740 (income taxes) on deferred tax assets, excess tax benefits, and the windfall/shortfall mechanics that flow through the P&L.

ASC 718-50
Employee Share Purchase Plans

Standardized rules let analysts compare two companies on equal footing critical when stock comp can range from 5% to 40% of total operating expense.

ASC 718-740
Income Taxes

Mis-stated stock comp is a frequent SEC restatement trigger. Getting ASC 718 right is the cheapest insurance against an enforcement action.

How ASC 718 Works - A Three-Stage Process

Whether you grant 100 options or 100,000 RSUs, the workflow is the same. Three stages, in this exact order, every time.

1

Establish Fair Value

For private companies, this starts with a Section 409A valuation of the common stock. The grant-date fair value of the award is then derived using an option-pricing model (Black-Scholes or Lattice).

2

Recognize the Expense

Total grant-date fair value is allocated across the requisite service period usually the vesting schedule using either the straight-line or graded (FIN 28) attribution method.

3

Disclose & Reconcile

Expense flows through the P&L; outstanding awards, weighted-average exercise prices, and key assumptions appear in financial-statement footnotes each period.

Recognizing the Expense: Straight-Line vs. Graded Attribution

ASC 718 permits two attribution methods for service-only awards. The choice affects when expense hits the income statement, even though total expense is identical over the life of the awar

The Setup

Assume Nimbus Robotics, Inc. grants 120,000 stock options to a new VP of Engineering on January 1. The award vests in equal annual tranches over four years. The grant-date fair value per option, calculated using Black-Scholes, is $3.00, so the total compensation cost to be recognized is $360,000.

Even Recognition Across the Service Period

Under the straight-line method, the total $360,000 of compensation cost is divided evenly across the four-year service period – $90,000 per year – regardless of how the underlying tranches vest.

When to choose this: Service-only awards, predictable financials, and a preference for smooth quarterly results. Most private companies default to straight-line for simplicity.

Front-Loaded Recognition by Tranche

Under the graded method, each annual tranche is treated as a separate award with its own service period. The first-year tranche vests in one year, the second-year tranche in two, and so on. The result is heavier expense early and lighter expense later.

Step 1: Identify Each Tranche

Notice the front-loading: 52% of total expense ($187,500 of $360,000) hits Year 1 under the graded method, versus only 25% ($90,000) under straight-line. For performance-based awards, the graded method is generally required.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Same award, same total cost, two very different P&L shapes:

How the Grant-Date Fair Value Is Calculated

ASC 718 doesn’t prescribe a single formula. It tells you to use an option-pricing model appropriate to the award. In practice, that means one of two models: Black-Scholes or a Lattice (binomial) tree.

The Six Inputs Every Model Needs

Both methods rely on the same family of inputs – the difference is how each handles variability and early exercise.

Black-Scholes vs. Lattice — Which Model Fits?

Closed-Form Solution

Black-Scholes-Merton

Path-Dependent Model

Lattice / Binomial

Tax Treatment: ISOs vs. NSOs at a Glance

ASC 718 governs the books, but the IRS governs the taxes. The two systems run in parallel, and the type of option you grant changes both sides of the equation.

Key takeaway: ASC 718 doesn’t distinguish between ISOs and NSOs – book expense is the same for both. The divergence is on the tax side, where NSO exercises generate a deductible expense and ISO exercises generally don’t. ASC 718-740 governs how those tax differences flow into deferred taxes and additional paid-in capital.

The ASC 718 Footnote Checklists

Expensing the award is only half the job. ASC 718 also requires extensive footnote disclosure so that readers understand the assumptions baked into the number.

ASC 718 FAQs

Quick answers to the questions we hear most often from founders, CFOs, and audit teams preparing for ASC 718 reviews.

Yes. ASC 718 applies to any U.S. entity that prepares GAAP financial statements and issues share-based payments, regardless of whether the company is public or private. Private companies typically face the standard at the point they begin producing audited financials or raise institutional capital.

No. A 409A valuation establishes the fair market value of common stock for IRS tax purposes and sets the strike price of options. ASC 718 is a financial reporting standard that governs how the resulting compensation expense is measured and recorded under U.S. GAAP. The two work together but answer different questions.

The straight-line method spreads total grant-date fair value evenly across the requisite service period. The graded method treats each vesting tranche as a separate award, which front-loads expense recognition. For service-only awards, ASC 718 permits either method; for performance-based awards, the graded method is generally required.

 

Companies elect either to estimate forfeitures at the grant date and true up later, or to account for forfeitures as they occur. The election is an accounting policy choice and must be applied consistently. Most early-stage private companies elect the actual-forfeiture method for simplicity.

Black-Scholes is appropriate for plain-vanilla options with no early-exercise behavior or path-dependent features. A Lattice (binomial) model is preferred when the award has performance conditions, market conditions, or material expected early-exercise patterns. The choice should be documented and applied consistently.

Yes. RSUs are scoped into ASC 718 and follow the same grant-date fair value framework. For RSUs, the fair value is simply the stock price at grant (less the present value of any forgone dividends), so no option-pricing model is needed. Attribution still uses straight-line or graded methods.

Get Started

Get ASC 718 right the first time before your audit, your raise, or your IPO clock starts.

Countsure’s valuation and accounting team builds defensible ASC 718 workpapers, Black-Scholes and Lattice valuations, footnote disclosures, and 409A studies in one coordinated engagement. We work with founders, CFOs, and audit firms across the U.S.

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