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Understanding Your Tax Projection Results

Learn how to read your 5-year tax projection and understand why estimates may differ from client expectations.

Understanding Your 5-Year Tax Projection Output

Once you submit your tax model, Grantd generates a 5-year projection showing:

Component What It Shows
Federal Income Tax Regular tax calculation using marginal brackets
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Parallel AMT calculation (you pay the higher amount)
State Income Tax Estimated based on your input rate
FICA Taxes Social Security + Medicare on earned income
Total Tax Liability Sum of all tax components for each year

Each year shows the tax liability based on the income, deductions, and assumptions you entered. This projection serves as your baseline before layering in equity compensation strategies.

Why Tax Estimates May Differ from Client Expectations

Several factors can cause Grantd estimates to differ from what clients expect:

1. Withholding vs. Liability Gap

The Issue: Equity comp withholding (often 22%) may not cover actual marginal tax rate (could be 32%, 35%, or 37%)

Result: Client owes more at filing despite "taxes being taken out"

Solution: Model tax reserve needs; adjust W-4 withholding or make estimated tax payments

2. AMT Surprise

The Issue: Clients don't realize ISO exercises trigger AMT

Result: Unexpected tax bill even though they "didn't sell anything"

Solution: Model AMT impact before exercise; plan for credits in future years

3. State Tax Treatment

The Issue: Different states treat equity comp differently (e.g., California's complex sourcing rules)

Result: State tax may be higher or lower than estimate

Solution: Verify with CPA familiar with client's state; use conservative rates

4. Timing of Events

The Issue: Grantd projections assume certain events will occur; actual timing may differ

Result: Taxes shift between years

Solution: Update model as events occur or plans change; treat as living document

5. Tax Law Changes

The Issue: Tax brackets, deductions, and credits change annually; major reforms occasionally occur

Result: Multi-year projections become less certain

Solution: The Grantd team updates the engine with each tax law change; review projections annually

6. Estimated Tax Payment Requirements

The Issue: Clients may not realize they need to make quarterly estimated payments beyond withholding

Result: Underpayment penalties at tax time

Solution: Use Grantd projections to calculate estimated tax needs; remind clients of quarterly deadlines (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15)

7. SALT Deduction Impact

The Issue: With changes to SALT cap under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, clients in high-tax states may see significantly different itemized deduction benefits

Result: Projections made before this change may underestimate deduction amounts

Solution: Update tax models to reflect current SALT deduction rules; especially important for CA, NY, NJ, and other high-tax state residents

How to Explain This to Your Client

When discussing tax calculations with clients, use this simplified framework:

"The Grantd platform calculates your estimated taxes the same way the IRS does, but in advance so we can plan:

  1. We add up all your income—including your salary and any equity compensation that vests or is exercised
  2. We subtract your deductions—either the standard amount or itemized if you have enough write-offs
  3. We calculate your tax—using the current year's tax brackets, and separately checking if Alternative Minimum Tax applies (which is common with stock options)
  4. We estimate state taxes—based on your state's tax rate
  5. We calculate FICA taxes—Social Security and Medicare on your wages
  6. We subtract any credits—like child tax credits or education credits

These are estimates because:

  • Equity events may or may not happen as planned
  • Tax withholding from your paychecks may not cover the full liability
  • We're looking years into the future with assumptions that may change
  • The U.S. pay-as-you-go system means you need to pay taxes throughout the year—sometimes through withholding, sometimes through quarterly estimated payments

That's why we review and update this regularly—and why you should verify everything with your CPA at tax time. It's also why we may recommend setting aside cash reserves or making estimated tax payments to avoid penalties."

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