TL;DR Answer Box
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) is a parallel tax calculation that can apply when certain deductions and “preference items” reduce your regular tax too far. Many high-earning tech employees run into AMT because of Incentive Stock Options (ISOs), large capital gains, and state and local tax deductions that do not behave the same way under AMT rules. The goal is not to fear AMT. The goal is to model it early so exercising equity does not create an avoidable cash crunch. Last updated: February 17, 2026.
Introduction
AMT is one of those tax concepts that sounds academic until it becomes very real. You do what looks like a smart move, like exercising ISOs early or stacking deductions in a high-income year, and suddenly your tax bill does not follow the rules you thought you were playing by.
The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) is not a penalty for doing something wrong. It is a separate tax system that can override parts of the regular tax system when your tax benefits get too powerful. For high earners with equity compensation, the practical point is simple: AMT can turn an equity decision into a liquidity problem if you do not plan ahead.
What is the Alternative Minimum Tax and why it exists
What AMT does
AMT is a “minimum floor” tax concept. Under AMT rules, you calculate taxes twice: once under the regular federal tax system and once under AMT rules. If the AMT calculation is higher, you generally pay the higher amount.
The reason AMT exists is that Congress wanted to limit how far certain tax benefits could reduce a high earner’s tax bill. The details matter, but you do not need to become a tax attorney to manage your exposure. You need a clear model and a decision framework.
Why tech employees see it more often
AMT shows up more often for high earners in tech for three common reasons:
- ISOs: Exercising Incentive Stock Options can create AMT income based on the “bargain element,” even if you do not sell shares.
- SALT and itemizing: State and local tax deductions can be limited or disallowed under AMT rules, which matters if you live in high-tax areas.
- Large gains: Big capital gains years can change how exemptions phase out and can pull you into AMT territory depending on your full picture.
What triggers AMT for high earners
ISOs and the bargain element
This is the most common AMT trap for tech employees.
When you exercise ISOs, you typically buy shares at a lower exercise price. The difference between the fair market value (FMV) and your exercise price is the “bargain element.” Under AMT rules, that bargain element can be treated like income for AMT purposes even if you do not sell the stock.
In plain terms: you can owe tax on value you have not turned into cash yet. That is why AMT planning is often really liquidity planning.
If you want the deeper ISO-specific playbook, start here: ISOs Strategy: Avoid AMT & Build Long-Term Wealth.
SALT and itemized deductions under AMT
High earners in high-tax states often assume their itemized deductions will behave consistently year to year. AMT can break that assumption.
State and local taxes are a frequent AMT adjustment item. In practical terms, you may lose the expected benefit of deductions that reduced your regular taxable income.
For planning context, see: The High Earner’s Guide to State and Local Taxes (SALT).
Large capital gains and exemption phaseout
AMT is not only about deductions. Large income events can matter because AMT exemptions can phase out as income rises.
Consider a founder liquidity event, a concentrated stock sale, or a large crypto gain year. Even when long-term capital gains are taxed at preferential rates under the regular system, a high-income year can reduce your AMT exemption and indirectly expose more of your income to AMT rules.
How AMT is calculated
You can think of AMT as a structured process rather than a mysterious extra tax.
Step-by-step process
- Calculate your regular tax. This is your normal federal tax outcome based on your return.
- Compute your AMT adjustments and preference items. These are add-backs and changes that AMT requires.
- Determine your Alternative Minimum Taxable Income (AMTI). This is your taxable income after AMT adjustments.
- Subtract the AMT exemption (if available). The exemption depends on filing status and can phase out at higher income levels.
- Apply AMT rates (26% and 28%). AMT uses a two-rate structure.
- Compare AMT to your regular tax. If AMT is higher, you generally pay AMT. If it is lower, you generally pay the regular tax amount.
- Evaluate AMT credits. In some cases, AMT paid because of deferral items may create a credit that can help in future years.
Where Form 6251 fits
Form 6251 is the IRS form used to calculate AMT for individuals. You do not “choose” AMT. If the rules pull you into it, the calculation flows through Form 6251 as part of a complete return.
Here is the IRS page for it: About Form 6251.
AMT at-a-glance
- Two AMT rates: 26% and 28%
- AMT shows up when: tentative minimum tax exceeds regular tax
- Most common tech trigger: ISO exercises with a meaningful bargain element
- Key planning principle: model AMT before you exercise, and make sure you have a liquidity plan
AMT rates and exemptions for 2023 and 2024
AMT exemptions and phaseout thresholds change by year. The numbers below are commonly cited for 2023 and 2024 planning and are useful as a reference point when you are reviewing past returns or modeling exercises.
2023 snapshot
- AMT exemption: $81,300 for individuals and $126,500 for married filing jointly
- Exemption phaseout begins at: $578,150 (individual) and $1,156,300 (married filing jointly)
- AMT rates: 26% and 28%
2024 snapshot
- AMT exemption: $85,700 for individuals and $133,300 for married filing jointly
- Exemption phaseout begins at: $609,350 (individual) and $1,218,700 (married filing jointly)
- AMT rates: 26% and 28%
Planning strategies to reduce AMT exposure
AMT planning is rarely about “avoiding” AMT at all costs. It is about optimizing your after-tax outcome and avoiding surprises. For many tech employees, the best strategy is controlled pacing, clean modeling, and intentional liquidity management.
ISO exercise pacing
A common strategy is to exercise ISOs up to a planned threshold where AMT stays manageable. This is where scenario modeling matters: you estimate how many options you can exercise before AMT becomes painful, then stage exercises over multiple years where appropriate.
This is also where reality checks matter. Even if you can minimize AMT, you are still concentrating risk when you exercise and hold. Your best tax outcome is not always your best risk-adjusted outcome.
If you want the ISO-specific version of this strategy, use: ISOs Strategy: Avoid AMT & Build Long-Term Wealth.
Timing and liquidity planning
If AMT is the surprise tax, liquidity is the surprise problem.
Before you exercise, you want to model three things:
- Cash required: exercise cost plus potential AMT due
- Downside scenario: what happens if the stock falls after exercise
- Exit plan: when you could sell shares (if allowed) and how that intersects with holding period goals
When the company is private, liquidity constraints can magnify the risk. When the company is public, trading windows and blackout periods matter. Either way, plan the cash.
AMT credits and future-year recovery
If you pay AMT because of deferral items, you may be eligible for an AMT credit in future years, depending on how your tax profile evolves. This is one reason documenting the details and coordinating with your CPA matters. When people lose track of AMT credit opportunities, they sometimes leave real dollars on the table.
If you want a practical example-based walkthrough, see: Case Study: The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) and Equity Compensation (ISOs, RSUs).
Investment watch-outs
Some investments can interact with AMT in ways that are easy to miss. For example, interest from certain private activity bonds can be treated differently for AMT purposes. On the other hand, some municipal bond interest may be AMT-free depending on the bond type and your situation. The right approach depends on eligibility, current income, and overall portfolio construction.
Think of this as a reminder: tax strategy should follow portfolio strategy, not replace it.
Common mistakes
- Exercising ISOs without modeling AMT first. The math can be unforgiving.
- Confusing “tax savings” with “good investment decision.” A better tax outcome does not automatically justify concentrated risk.
- Forgetting liquidity constraints. Private company equity can create AMT before you have cash to pay it.
- Not coordinating with your CPA. AMT credit tracking and documentation is not the place for guesswork.
- Ignoring SALT and itemizing dynamics. AMT can change how your expected deductions behave.
Action steps
- Pull your last two returns. Look for Form 6251, ISO exercises, or notes from your CPA about AMT exposure.
- If you have ISOs, model before you exercise. Build a plan around exercise cost, potential AMT, and your cash runway.
- Stress-test the downside. Ask what happens if the stock price drops after you exercise and hold.
- Coordinate your team. If you have a financial planner and a CPA, ensure they are aligned on your exercise plan and tax projections.
- Document everything. Exercise confirmations, FMV at exercise, and any AMT credit records should be tracked cleanly.
Key Takeaways
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) is a parallel tax system. You can owe it even when your regular tax looks reasonable.
- Tech employees often face AMT because ISO exercises can create AMT income without a stock sale.
- AMT planning is usually liquidity planning. Model the cash requirement before you exercise.
- AMT exemptions and phaseouts change by year, so confirm the correct year’s thresholds when planning.
- Done right, AMT planning can reduce surprises and protect your ability to make long-term equity decisions with confidence.
Facts/FAQ
What is AMT in simple terms?
AMT is a second tax calculation with different rules. If your AMT result is higher than your regular tax result, you generally pay the higher amount. It often shows up when deductions or preference items reduce regular tax more than AMT allows.
Do ISOs always trigger AMT?
Not always. ISOs can trigger AMT when the bargain element is meaningful and you exercise and hold the shares. If you exercise and sell in the same year, the tax treatment can differ. Your results depend on timing, FMV at exercise, and your full tax profile.
What is Form 6251 and do I need to file it?
Form 6251 is the form used to calculate AMT for individuals. If AMT applies to you, it is typically included with your return as part of the full filing package. Many tax software tools and CPAs handle it automatically, but you should still understand what is driving the result.
How do AMT exemptions and phaseouts work?
AMT includes an exemption that reduces the income subject to AMT, but that exemption can phase out as income rises. Once you are deep enough into the phaseout range, the exemption can be reduced substantially, which can make AMT feel like it “turns on” quickly.
Can I get AMT back later with the AMT credit?
Sometimes. If AMT was paid because of deferral items, you may be eligible for a credit that can reduce future tax, depending on your future-year circumstances. This is one area where coordination and recordkeeping can matter a lot over time.
What should I model before exercising ISOs?
At minimum: exercise cost, potential AMT due, downside risk if the stock price falls, and your liquidity timeline. Tailored Wealth typically helps high earners bring this into one model so equity decisions, tax projections, and cash planning work together instead of competing.
Internal Links
- ISOs Strategy: Avoid AMT & Build Long-Term Wealth: ISO-first planning to reduce AMT surprises and manage concentration risk.
- Case Study: The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) and Equity Compensation (ISOs, RSUs): A scenario-based walkthrough to make the math feel real.
- Tax Implications of Equity Compensation in Tech: Broader equity compensation context beyond AMT.
- The High Earner’s Guide to State and Local Taxes (SALT): Why SALT deductions can disappoint under AMT rules.
External Links
- IRS Topic 556: Alternative Minimum Tax
- IRS: About Form 6251
- AMT calculator (Omni Calculator)
- AMT explainer video (YouTube)
CTA
If you are a high earner with ISOs, RSUs, or a concentrated tech position, AMT is not something to “learn about” once. It is something to plan around before you exercise, sell, or donate.
If you want help turning AMT into a predictable model, Tailored Wealth can help you coordinate equity strategy, tax projections, and liquidity planning so you make decisions with confidence instead of reacting to surprises. If you are not sure where to start, begin with your Wealth Resilience Scorecard and a coordinated planning review.