Secondary Sales for Founders & Employees: How to Sell Startup Equity

· 11 min read

Secondary sales let startup founders and employees sell their equity before IPO or acquisition. Instead of waiting years for liquidity, you can sell shares to investors and get cash today. But secondary sales come with restrictions, tax implications, and negotiation challenges.

This guide explains how secondary sales work, when you can sell, who buys your shares, and what to watch out for.

What is a Secondary Sale?

A secondary sale is when a shareholder sells their stock to another buyer (not the company). The seller gets cash. The buyer gets equity. The startup doesn't raise new money — it's a transfer between existing and new shareholders.

Primary vs secondary sales:

Most funding rounds are primary (company raises capital). Secondary sales happen separately, often at specific milestones or during late-stage rounds.

Who Can Do Secondary Sales?

Founders

Founders can sell their shares after certain triggers:

Founder warning: Early investors often resist founder secondary sales. They want founders fully committed, not taking chips off the table. Expect pushback before Series B.

Employees

Employees can sell shares only if:

Employee warning: Most startup option agreements have right of first refusal (ROFR) — the company or existing investors get first chance to buy your shares before you can sell to outsiders.

Early Investors

Angel investors and early VCs sometimes sell secondary shares to:

When Do Secondary Sales Happen?

Secondary sales typically occur at these stages:

Stage Secondary Activity Typical Buyers
Pre-seed / Seed Rare None (investors won't allow)
Series A Occasional New investors, company buyback
Series B Common Growth equity, late-stage VCs
Series C+ Frequent Secondary platforms, family offices, sovereign funds
Pre-IPO Very active Hedge funds, mutual funds, secondary markets

Who Buys Secondary Shares?

Secondary buyers fall into several categories:

Late-Stage VCs and Growth Equity

Firms like Sequoia, Andreessen Horowitz, or T. Rowe Price buy secondary shares to:

Secondary Market Platforms

Platforms like Forge Global, EquityZen, and Nasdaq Private Market connect sellers with institutional buyers:

Family Offices and Sovereign Wealth Funds

High-net-worth individuals and government funds buy startup equity for portfolio diversification and long-term growth.

Company Buybacks

Some companies buy back shares from employees using cash on hand. This is the cleanest secondary sale — no outside buyers involved.

How Secondary Pricing Works

Secondary shares typically trade at a discount to the last preferred round because they're illiquid and lack control rights.

Typical Secondary Pricing
Secondary Price = Last Preferred Price × (1 - Discount)

Typical discounts:

Pricing Example

Your last round raised at $10/share. You want to sell secondary shares:

Scenario Discount Secondary Price 10,000 Shares =
Normal market 25% $7.50 $75,000
Struggling company 40% $6.00 $60,000
Hot growth 0% $10.00 $100,000

Tax Implications of Secondary Sales

Taxes depend on how long you've held the stock and what type of equity you have:

Qualified Stock (ISOs or RSUs)

Held > 1 year: Long-term capital gains (15-20% federal tax)

Held < 1 year: Short-term capital gains (ordinary income rate, up to 37%)

Non-Qualified Options (NSOs)

You pay ordinary income tax on the bargain element (spread at exercise) when you exercise. Then capital gains tax when you sell. Secondary sales trigger both if you haven't exercised yet.

Tax warning: Consult a tax advisor before secondary sales. The difference between exercising at $0.50 and selling at $10 could trigger AMT for ISO holders. NSOs generate ordinary income tax immediately upon exercise.

Restrictions on Secondary Sales

Your ability to sell shares may be limited by:

Right of First Refusal (ROFR)

The company or existing investors get first right to buy your shares at the offered price. You can only sell to outsiders if they decline.

Board Approval

Most companies require board approval for any secondary sale. The board can block sales for strategic reasons.

Lock-Up Periods

After funding rounds or before IPO, you may be restricted from selling for 6-18 months.

Company Policy

Many companies have explicit policies about when and how secondary sales can occur. Check your employee handbook or ask HR.

How to Execute a Secondary Sale

Step 1: Check Your Restrictions

Review your option grant agreement for: - Transfer restrictions - Right of first refusal clauses - Board approval requirements - Lock-up periods

Step 2: Get Board Approval

Submit a request to sell shares. Include: - Number of shares - Desired price - Buyer identity (if known) - Reason for sale

Step 3: Find a Buyer

Options: - Company buyback (cleanest) - Introduction from existing investors - Secondary market platforms - Direct buyer search

Step 4: Negotiate Price

Use the last preferred round as a starting point. Expect a 20-30% discount for illiquidity. Hot companies may sell at par or premium.

Step 5: Execute and File

Sign stock purchase agreements. Update the cap table. File 83(b) election if applicable (within 30 days of exercise, not sale).

Pros and Cons of Secondary Sales

Pros:
Cons:

Secondary Sales vs Waiting for Exit

Should you sell now or wait for IPO/acquisition?

Sell Now (Secondary)

10,000 shares @ $7.50 = $75,000 (guaranteed)

Wait for Exit (Risk)

10,000 shares @ $0 (if company fails) OR $25+ (if IPO at high valuation)

Secondary sales = guaranteed cash at discount. Waiting for exit = upside potential with downside risk.

Bottom Line

Secondary sales provide liquidity before exit, but they come with tradeoffs:

Your equity is your wealth. Secondary sales let you access some of that wealth today — but make sure you understand the full cost.

Understand Your Equity Position

Model your ownership, dilution, and potential exit value before making secondary sale decisions. Get a personalized equity analysis.

Generate Free Equity Report →

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