TL;DR Answer Box
If you get RSUs, a bonus, ESPP purchases, or stock option windows, you need a 12-month income and equity calendar before you need another tax strategy. The goal is simple: map every income spike and equity event for the next 12 months, then attach one of three tax moves to each event (increase W-2 withholding, make an estimated payment, or sell shares for tax cash). This turns tax season into confirmation instead of surprise. Last updated: February 18, 2026.
February income hits, then April surprises
February hits different when you are a high earner with variable pay.
Bonus lands. RSUs vest. Maybe ESPP shares purchase. Your paycheck doubles or triples for one pay period, and you feel the relief of all that income finally arriving.
Then March comes. April comes. And suddenly you are staring at a tax bill you did not see coming because payroll withholding treated your bonus and RSU vests like regular wages, not the stacked income events they actually are.
You are not behind because you are irresponsible. You are behind because you are operating without the one tool most executive households need: a one-page calendar that turns timing into decisions.
The real problem is timing, not rates
The biggest source of tax pain for executives is not the rate you pay. It is the surprise that comes from stacking income events without a plan.
Why payroll withholding misses stacked income
Your base salary gets withheld predictably all year. Then a bonus hits, then RSUs vest, then an ESPP purchase, then another vest. Each event triggers withholding, but payroll does not coordinate those events as a household tax strategy.
For many employers, bonuses and other supplemental wages are withheld using a flat method (often 22 percent), even if your effective marginal rate is higher once your total income is stacked. The gap becomes the April surprise.
Visibility is the fix. Not guesswork.
The pay-as-you-go rule
Federal income tax is pay as you go. The IRS expects taxes to be paid as income is earned, not only when you file. If you do not pay enough throughout the year, you may owe an underpayment penalty even if you pay the balance later.
Safe harbor basics for avoiding underpayment penalties
Safe harbor rules can help you reduce or avoid underpayment penalties, but the details depend on your situation. The practical takeaway is that many high earners need to monitor whether withholding and estimated payments are keeping pace as income spikes. If your income is uneven, the IRS notes you may be able to vary payments using an annualized approach.
Supplemental wage withholding in plain English
When employers use the flat-rate method for supplemental wages, the rate is commonly 22 percent. If supplemental wages paid to an employee during the year exceed $1 million, the rate can be 37 percent on the excess.
That is not “wrong.” It is just not designed to perfectly match your household’s final tax liability when bonuses, RSUs, and other income are stacked.
Build your 12-month income and equity calendar
This is the one-page deliverable. It takes about 15 minutes and can save months of stress.
Create a grid with 12 columns (one per month for the next 12 months starting today) and four rows:
- Income events
- Equity events
- Constraints
- Tax deadlines
The one-page grid (4 rows, 12 columns)
Income events: bonus payout month, commission spikes, deferred comp distributions, and any expected income swings. If you are married or partnered, include your spouse’s spikes too.
Equity events: RSU vest dates, ESPP offering start and purchase dates, stock option exercise windows, option expiration dates, and any planned sale windows. If you use a 10b5-1 plan or are considering one, note sale dates and trading windows.
Constraints: blackout periods, tuition payments, planned renovations, upcoming large purchases, and concentration checkpoints (how much of your net worth is employer stock right now).
Tax deadlines: estimated tax due dates and any state-specific deadlines that apply to you. The IRS explains estimated tax payment periods and due dates on its FAQ page.
Simple “table” you can follow: row, what to include, where to find it
- Income events: payout dates and amounts. Source: paystubs, employer payroll calendar, comp plan doc.
- Equity events: vest dates, ESPP purchase dates, option windows. Source: stock plan portal, grant agreements, brokerage schedule.
- Constraints: blackout windows, liquidity needs, concentration checks. Source: company trading policy, your personal goal timeline.
- Tax deadlines: quarterly estimated payment dates and filing deadlines. Source: IRS guidance and your CPA.
Now add one more column next to each event called Tax action.
For each income or equity event, choose one of three moves:
- Increase W-2 withholding (often the simplest lever)
- Make an estimated payment in the quarter the event occurs
- Sell shares for tax cash (especially when RSUs vest or when concentration is high)
If you want a broader foundation for handling bonuses, RSUs, and options in one system, start here: Tax Tips for Cash Bonuses, RSUs, and Stock Options.
Attach the right tax move to each event
Once the dates are on the page, the calendar becomes a decision engine.
RSUs
RSUs are typically taxed as compensation income when they vest and shares are delivered. Future price movement after vest is generally a capital gain or loss when you sell.
The common failure is assuming withholding matches your marginal rate. It often does not, especially when RSU vests stack with bonuses.
Your action options, depending on your facts and company plan mechanics:
- Increase W-2 withholding right after the vest (so you “catch up” throughout the year)
- Make an estimated payment in the quarter the vest occurs
- Sell enough shares for tax cash at vest (or shortly after), especially if concentration risk is high
If concentration is a recurring issue, it may be worth evaluating a systematic sale approach. For some executives, a 10b5-1 plan can provide structure, subject to legal, compliance, and company-policy constraints. 10b5-1 Plans for RSUs: From Legal Protection to Long-Term Diversification.
ESPP
ESPP taxation depends on holding-period rules, and the difference between a qualified and disqualified disposition can change the character of income. Decide now whether you are targeting a qualified disposition or selling immediately at purchase.
Practical calendar move: write the purchase date, then write the earliest date that meets your plan’s qualified disposition requirements (if you are targeting that). Put both on the calendar so you are not guessing later.
Stock options (ISOs vs NSOs)
Option tax treatment depends on whether you have ISOs or NSOs. NSOs commonly trigger ordinary income at exercise based on the spread. ISOs can create alternative minimum tax exposure in the year you exercise, even if you do not sell.
Calendar move: map exercise windows and expirations, then add an AMT planning checkpoint before any large ISO exercise.
If you want a deeper option overview, read: Stock Option Taxes: How to Keep More of What You Earn.
For AMT basics, start here: What is the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) and Why Should You Care?.
The executive cadence: two projections, not one
Building the calendar once is not enough. You need an operating rhythm.
Most executive households benefit from two projections per year:
- Projection one: right after the first major income spike (often February or March). Include base, bonus, RSU forecast, spouse income, current withholding, and expected liability.
- Projection two: mid-year or after the next major vest cycle. Update the income forecast and adjust withholding or estimated payments.
This is how you catch the shortfall early, when you still have time to fix it.
What this means for high earners
If you are a high earner, the tax problem is rarely “I do not make enough.” The problem is “my income arrives unevenly, and my withholding is not designed to adapt.”
A 12-month calendar solves the executive version of tax chaos:
- It makes cash needs visible before you commit them.
- It ties RSU and bonus timing to proactive actions, not reactive scrambling.
- It gives you a repeatable process you can run every year, even when life is busy.
Common mistakes
- Assuming payroll withholding is accurate: flat supplemental withholding can under-withhold at higher brackets. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
- No calendar: if it is not mapped, it is not managed.
- Waiting until March or April to project: by then, your options narrow.
- Ignoring spouse income: dual-income stacking is where surprises grow.
- Not planning for blackout windows: you cannot sell when you want to if you cannot trade.
- No AMT checkpoint for ISO exercises: large exercises can create avoidable pain.
- Letting concentration grow by default: “I will diversify later” usually gets expensive.
Action steps
- Build the 12-month grid today. Four rows, 12 columns, one page.
- Enter every bonus, vest, purchase, and option window. Use your plan portal and payroll schedule.
- Add constraints. Blackouts, tuition, renovations, liquidity needs.
- Attach a tax action to each event. Withholding change, estimated payment, or sell-for-tax-cash.
- Schedule two projection dates. One after the first spike, one mid-year.
- Track concentration quarterly. Put the checkpoint on the calendar.
If you want additional high-earner tax levers to pressure-test during your projections, this is a solid companion: 5 Smart High-Earner Moves to Maximize Your Tax Savings.
Key Takeaways
- A 12-month income and equity calendar turns timing into decisions.
- The biggest pain is stacked income surprises, not tax rates.
- Bonuses and RSUs may be withheld at flat rates that do not match your true marginal rate.
- Use three moves: adjust W-2 withholding, make estimated payments, or sell shares for tax cash.
- Run two projections per year so April becomes confirmation, not surprise.
Facts/FAQ
What is a 12-month income and equity calendar?
It is a one-page map of your next 12 months of income spikes and equity events, with a specific tax action attached to each event. It helps you manage withholding, estimated payments, and liquidity proactively.
Why is bonus and RSU withholding often too low?
Many employers withhold supplemental wages using a flat method that can be lower than your true marginal rate when income is stacked. The gap can show up as a large balance due at filing time.
What are the IRS pay-as-you-go rules and why do they matter?
The IRS expects taxes to be paid throughout the year as income is earned. If you do not pay enough during the year, you may owe an underpayment penalty, even if you pay later when filing.
Should I increase W-2 withholding or make estimated payments?
It depends on your income pattern, household filing situation, and how your payroll is set up. Many executives prefer increasing W-2 withholding because it is simple and spreads the catch-up over remaining pay periods. Estimated payments can be useful when withholding cannot be changed easily or when income is heavily uneven.
How are RSUs taxed?
RSUs are typically taxed as ordinary compensation income when they vest and shares are delivered. After that, future price movement is generally a capital gain or loss when you sell.
How often should I run tax projections if I have variable pay?
Many high earners benefit from two projections per year: one after the first major income spike and another mid-year or after the next vest cycle. If your income changes materially, more frequent updates may help.
Internal Links
- Bonus, RSU, and option basics: Tax Tips for Cash Bonuses, RSUs, and Stock Options. Connects variable pay events to practical decisions.
- Option mechanics and pitfalls: Stock Option Taxes: How to Keep More of What You Earn. Helps you plan exercise windows and tax impact.
- AMT planning checkpoint: What is the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) and Why Should You Care?. Useful before large ISO exercises.
- Structured RSU diversification: 10b5-1 Plans for RSUs: From Legal Protection to Long-Term Diversification. Helps reduce concentration risk with structure (case dependent).
- Additional high-earner levers: 5 Smart High-Earner Moves to Maximize Your Tax Savings. A checklist to pressure-test during projections.
External Links
- IRS Publication 15: Employer’s Tax Guide (supplemental wage withholding)
- IRS Topic 306: Penalty for underpayment of estimated tax
- IRS FAQ: When are quarterly estimated tax payments due?
CTA
If you get RSUs or a bonus this quarter, build the calendar first. It is the fastest way to stop tax surprises from hijacking your spring.
If you want a second set of eyes, start with the Tailored Wealth Wealth Resilience Scorecard. We use it to identify exposure across withholding gaps, equity concentration, liquidity timing, and tax coordination, then turn that into a quarterly operating rhythm.
If you want hands-on help building your calendar, running two projections, and integrating equity decisions into your next 12 months and your next decade, schedule a Wealth Strategy Call.
And if you want early access to the upcoming 2026 Executive Tax Guide, reply to your newsletter email and ask to be added to the waitlist.