How Much Is My Startup Equity Worth? (Honest Answer + Calculator)

June 12, 2026 · 12 min read · By FounderMath Team

You just got a job offer with "0.5% equity" and you have no idea what that means in dollars. Or you're a founder trying to explain to your early employees why their options matter. This guide breaks down exactly how to value startup equity — with real numbers, not hand-waving.

Quick: Calculate Your Equity Value Right Now

Enter your equity percentage and the company's valuation to see what your stake is worth — including dilution from future rounds.

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The Short Answer

Your startup equity is worth: Your Ownership % × Company Valuation. But that's the paper value. The real value depends on dilution, liquidation preferences, exit probability, and time to liquidity. For most startup employees, equity ends up worth 20-40% of the headline number by the time you actually see cash.

Step 1: Find Your Ownership Percentage

Your equity offer usually comes in one of these forms:

What You GotWhat It MeansHow to Convert to %
Stock options (e.g., 50,000 options)Right to buy shares at a set priceOptions ÷ Total Fully Diluted Shares × 100
Restricted Stock Units (RSUs)Shares you'll receive as they vestRSUs ÷ Total Fully Diluted Shares × 100
Percentage directly (e.g., "1% equity")Ownership stake stated in offerAlready a percentage — but ask if it's fully diluted

Critical question to ask: "Is this percentage based on fully diluted shares?" Fully diluted means all issued shares PLUS all options, warrants, and unissued pool. If they quote you 1% on just issued shares, your real stake is smaller.

Step 2: Estimate the Company's Valuation

Private companies don't have a stock price. Here's how to estimate:

Key Insight: Valuation ≠ Value

A $100M valuation doesn't mean $100M in cash changed hands. It means investors bought a slice at a price that implies the whole pie is worth $100M. If the company never exits, your equity is worth $0 regardless of the valuation.

Step 3: Account for Dilution

This is where most equity guides stop — and where the real math begins. Your 1% today won't be 1% at exit. Each funding round dilutes you.

Real Example: What Happens to 1% Over 3 Rounds

StageValuationYour OwnershipPaper Value
Hire date (Seed)$15M1.00%$150,000
After Series A ($12M raise)$50M0.78%$390,000
After Series B ($30M raise)$150M0.58%$870,000
After Series C ($60M raise)$400M0.42%$1,680,000

Your 1% became 0.42% — a 58% reduction. But your paper value went from $150K to $1.68M because the company's valuation grew faster than your dilution. This is the bet.

Use our free dilution calculator to model exactly what happens to your equity across funding rounds.

Step 4: Subtract Liquidation Preferences

Investors don't just own equity — they have liquidation preferences that guarantee they get paid first in an exit. This can dramatically reduce what common shareholders (you) receive.

How Liquidation Preferences Work

If Series A investors put in $20M with a 1x liquidation preference and the company sells for $30M:

  1. Series A investors take their $20M first
  2. Remaining $10M is split among all shareholders (including you) based on ownership %
  3. If your ownership is 0.5%, you get $10M × 0.5% = $50,000

Your "1% of $30M = $300K" just became $50K. That's an 83% haircut.

Model Your Exact Exit Proceeds

See how liquidation preferences, participation, and multiple preferences affect your payout at different exit values.

Free Liquidation Preference Calculator →

Step 5: Apply a Probability Discount

Even after accounting for dilution and liquidation preferences, you need to discount for exit probability:

StageChance of Successful ExitWhat to Expect
Pre-seed / Angel5-10%90% of companies fail before Series A
Seed10-15%Most die or become lifestyle businesses
Series A15-25%Strong signal, but still high failure rate
Series B30-40%Product-market fit usually confirmed
Series C+40-60%Significant revenue, clearer path to exit

Expected Value Calculation

Expected Value = Paper Value × Exit Probability × (1 - Average Dilution)

For our example: $1,680,000 paper value × 40% exit probability (Series C) × 0.7 (after liq prefs) = $470,400 expected value.

This is a more honest number than "your equity is worth $1.68 million."

Step 6: Factor in Time and Vesting

Equity isn't free money. It comes with constraints:

Use our vesting schedule calculator to see exactly when each portion of your equity becomes yours.

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: Early Engineer at Seed-Stage Startup

Offer: $130K salary + 0.75% in stock options (4-year vest)

Company: Raised $3M seed at $12M post-money

Your paper value: 0.75% × $12M = $90,000

After dilution (3 rounds): ~0.35% at $200M exit = $700,000

Expected value (30% probability): ~$210,000 over 7 years

Verdict: Equivalent to ~$30K/year bonus in expected value. Decent if you believe in the team, but don't take a massive salary cut for it.

Scenario 2: Senior Engineer at Series B Startup

Offer: $190K salary + 0.15% in RSUs (4-year vest)

Company: Raised $40M Series B at $200M post-money

Your paper value: 0.15% × $200M = $300,000

After dilution (1-2 rounds): ~0.10% at $500M exit = $500,000

Expected value (40% probability): ~$200,000 over 4-5 years

Verdict: Lower risk, more realistic return. RSUs have no exercise cost. This is a solid offer.

Scenario 3: Founder with 50% at Pre-Seed

Starting: 50% of company, $0 salary initially

After 4 rounds of dilution: ~15-25% at exit

At $100M exit: $15-25M (before liquidation preferences)

After 1x participating preferences (~$80M invested): ~$8-15M

Verdict: Life-changing money, but you worked 7-10 years for it at below-market salary. The per-hour rate might surprise you.

Common Mistakes People Make Valuing Equity

  1. Using headline ownership % without dilution: Your 1% will be 0.4% by exit. Plan for it.
  2. Ignoring liquidation preferences: Investors get paid first. In a down exit, you might get nothing.
  3. Forgetting exercise costs: You have to pay to exercise options. At a successful company, this can be $50K+ in exercise costs plus taxes.
  4. Treating equity as guaranteed income: Most startups fail. Never accept equity in lieu of a livable salary.
  5. Not comparing to alternatives: $200K expected equity value over 4 years vs. $400K extra you'd earn at Big Tech. The startup needs to win on learning, impact, or specific company conviction.

Quick Reference: Equity Worth by Stage

Company StageTypical Equity GrantPaper Value at That StageExpected Value (Risk-Adjusted)
Pre-seed1-3%$30-90K$3-9K
Seed0.5-1.5%$50-150K$7-22K
Series A0.25-0.75%$75-225K$15-45K
Series B0.1-0.3%$100-300K$30-90K
Series C+0.05-0.15%$100-300K$50-150K

For detailed benchmarks by role and stage, check our startup equity benchmarks page.

The Bottom Line

Your startup equity is probably worth less than you think — but it might still be worth taking. The key is to do the math honestly:

  1. Start with your ownership percentage
  2. Multiply by a realistic exit valuation
  3. Subtract dilution (typically 40-60% over multiple rounds)
  4. Subtract liquidation preferences
  5. Multiply by exit probability (10-60% depending on stage)
  6. Divide by years to liquidity (4-10 years)

That's your expected annual equity compensation. Compare it honestly against the salary difference at Big Tech or a public company.

Get Your Free Equity Score

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