
If you’re a startup employee with stock options, you’ve probably heard this phrase before: “Non-recourse financing.”
It sounds technical, but the idea is actually simple and powerful.
Non-recourse financing means:
Repayment depends entirely on the asset’s outcome, in our case your stock options.
In other words: If there’s no exit or liquidity, you don’t owe anything back.
• No loan.
• No personal debt.
• No obligation if your shares never become valuable.
For employees facing high exercise costs and real financial risk, this model can be the difference between owning equity and walking away from it. Let’s break it down.
Stock options only turn into real ownership once you exercise them. That usually means paying:
• The strike price
• Potential taxes, often significant for NSOs or ISOs that trigger could AMT
According to Equitybee data, the average U.S. startup employee faces around $140,000 in combined exercise costs and taxes. On top of that, most employees only have a limited window, often 90 days after leaving a company, to make this decision. Because of this, more than 55% of startup employees lose their equity, not because they don’t believe in their company, but because the financial risk feels too high.
Traditional options force employees into tough tradeoffs:
• Use personal savings and take full downside risk
• Take a loan and owe repayment regardless of outcome
• Walk away and lose the equity entirely
Non-recourse financing offers a different path.
Non-recourse financing shifts the financial risk away from the employee and onto the investor.
At a high level, it works like this:
1
An investor funds your option exercise (and applicable taxes)
2
You become a shareholder in your company
3
If there’s a successful exit, the investor receives a pre-agreed return
4
If there’s no exit, you owe nothing
There is a cost to the capital, but it is only paid if the company exits. If the shares never produce value, there is no repayment. This alignment is critical. The investor only benefits if there is a liquidity event.
This is where many people get confused.
• Fixed repayment obligation
• Interest accrues over time
• You repay even if the company fails
• No repayment without an exit
• No personal liability*
• The return is tied to the outcome of the shares
The risk profile matches the reality of startup equity, which is uncertain by nature.
*Assumes you comply with the agreement terms.
Equitybee uses a non-recourse model designed specifically for employee stock options.
Through the platform:
• Investors fund the exercise of your options
• You remain the shareholder
• Terms of repayment are agreed upfront
If your company never goes public, gets acquired, or if you never sell your shares, you don’t owe anything.
To date, Equitybee has:
Helped 2,750+ startup employees become shareholders
Worked with employees from 850+ pre-IPO companies
Facilitated $247M+ in total volumes
Supported employees from companies like Reddit, Figma, Stripe, Databricks, Klarna, Plaid, and more
The model is designed to remove personal financial liability while preserving long-term upside.
This type of financing is often a good fit if you:
• Are leaving your company and facing a short exercise window
• Believe in your company’s long-term potential
• Want to avoid using savings or taking on debt
• Prefer to keep ownership instead of selling early
Startup equity is already risky. Exercising stock options shouldn’t require employees to put their personal financial security on the line as well. Non-recourse financing aligns incentives:
• Employees participate in upside
• Investors are compensated only if value is created
• Personal downside is limited to the equity itself
That’s the principle behind Equitybee’s model.
If cost or risk is what’s stopping you from exercising your options, there is another way.
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What’s the Difference Between ISO and NSO Stock Options?
Equitybee executes private financing contracts (PFCs), which allow an investor a percentage claim to employee stock options upon a liquidation event, with no guarantee of such an event, and is subject to the terms of your company options agreement. Entering into a PFC could limit your profits; you should consult with your own professional advisers prior to entering into PFCs. Funding is not guaranteed. In the event of a default of contract, Equitybee reserves the right to pursue legal action. PFCs are brokered by EquityBee Securities, LLC, member FINRA.