Leaving Motive? Plan your 90-day ISO window

Calculator · free · no signup · pre-IPO

Motive is pre-IPO. Left with vested ISOs? Model the 90-day exercise-or-forfeit decision and its AMT cost at any valuation: current 409A or an expected exit price.

Beta · invite-only · AlphaLatitude Inc. · Free Tools

Your grant

Seeded from secondary-market data, as of Jun 9, 2026

3 yrs
10%
20%
5.0%

Tax inputs

Grant timeline

Recommended exercise quantity

Exercise all 10,000

With 10%/yr expected growth over the 3-yr hold, every share's expected after-tax gain exceeds its marginal AMT cost. Net value: $64,764 at horizon.

Net after-tax value vs. shares exercised

Each point is the expected after-tax NPV at your hold horizon if you exercise that many shares now and let the rest expire.

$0$16K$32K$49K$65K02,5005,0007,50010,000
Recommended (10,000)Full exercise (10,000)

Year-by-year tax breakdown

You pay the higher of Regular tax and Tentative AMT per jurisdiction, then subtract Credit recovered. The result is Net tax. Hover any number for the bracket-by-bracket breakdown.

110,000
20
30

Federal AMT credit

Earned

$9,046

Recovered

$9,046

Remaining

$0

Estimates only. Excludes disqualifying dispositions, NSOs, multi-state moves, and AMT preferences other than ISO bargain elements. Long-term capital gains tax assumes a qualifying disposition (ISO held ≥1 yr from exercise and ≥2 yr from grant); state LTCG follows ordinary brackets except where the state grants preferential treatment (HI, ND, SC, WI, AR, NM) or has a dedicated LTCG-only tax (WA). Assumes you are within the $100K ISO limit (any portion of an annual ISO grant whose FMV at grant exceeds $100K is treated as NSO from the start, §422(d)). State AMT figures are 2025 (next-year values published in late 2026). Not financial advice.

QSBS note. If your shares qualify (typically pre-IPO C-corp grants held 5+ years), a federal rule lets you exclude up to $10M of gain on a future sale from federal tax. That single rule shifts exercise-timing math more than AMT does. (This is §1202 “qualified small-business stock”.) Modeled in beta, not here.

You solved the exercise window. The beta plans what comes after it: the new shares, your remaining equity, hedges, and taxes in one multi-year plan.

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About Motive

Motive is a privately held Vertical SaaS company, incorporated in Delaware and headquartered in San Francisco, CA.

Last reported secondary-market price: $14.15 per share (as of 2026-06-09). Your own 409A may differ.

Fleet mgmt.

Equity grants at Motive typically include incentive stock options (ISOs) and non-qualified stock options (NSOs).

Motive Technologies, Inc. is a technology company that creates software used by truck companies. Its main product is Hours of Service monitoring using GPS tracking and dashcams.

Source: Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Shoaib Makani, Ryan Johns, and Obaid Khan founded Motive, then called KeepTruckin, in 2013 to bring digital compliance and safety tools to commercial trucking. The platform has since expanded into fleet management software covering driver safety scores, real-time GPS, fuel efficiency, and maintenance tracking across physical operations industries. The company rebranded as Motive in 2022. It raised $150 million in its most recent round while generating nearly $500 million in annualized recurring revenue and reaching cash-flow positive status by late 2024. Motive filed an S-1 for a NYSE IPO in December 2025.

Sources: en.wikipedia.org · news.alphastreet.com

Equity comp at Motive

  • Motive issued RSUs under its 2013 Plan subject to both a time-based service condition and a liquidity event condition. The liquidity event trigger (the second condition, requiring either a qualified IPO or a change of control before shares settle) is satisfied by whichever occurs first. RSUs outstanding at the December 2025 S-1 filing were set to settle upon effectiveness of the registration statement, meaning employees who separated before the IPO would forfeit time-vested RSUs if the event trigger had not yet been satisfied.

Sources: sec.gov · gomotive.com

Researched 2026-05-10.

OptionsAhoy is an independent tool and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Motive.

If you are leaving Motive with vested incentive stock options (ISOs), most stock plans give you 90 days from departure to exercise or forfeit them. The calculator works at any valuation: enter your strike and the current 409A fair market value (FMV) or an expected exit price. It computes your window deadline, the alternative minimum tax (AMT) cost of exercising in full, and the partial-exercise share count that maximizes expected after-tax value.

Example: leaving Motive with 5,000 vested ISOs at a $4.25 strike, with the last reported price at $14.15, exercising all of them inside the 90-day window puts a $49,500 bargain element into one tax year. Above the 2026 federal AMT exemption ($88,100 single, $137,000 married joint), the 28% AMT rate adds roughly $13,860 on top of regular tax before any state AMT (CA, CO, CT, MN). Exercising fewer shares lowers that bill at the cost of forfeiting the rest; the calculator above finds the count that maximizes expected after-tax value for your exact figures.

All Motive tools → · Use the generic Post-Termination ISO Exercise Calculator for any company.

Motive equity questions

I left Motive. How long do I have to exercise my ISOs?
Most stock plans give you 90 days from your departure date to exercise vested incentive stock options (ISOs); unexercised options are forfeited when the window closes. Tax law is slightly wider: ISO treatment requires you to have been an employee within 3 months of exercise (Internal Revenue Code Section 422(a)(2)), so options exercised under an employer-extended window are taxed as non-qualified stock options (NSOs). Check your grant agreement for Motive's exact terms. The calculator above computes your deadline from your departure date, the alternative minimum tax (AMT) cost of exercising, and the share count that maximizes after-tax value.
Does Motive grant ISOs, NSOs, or RSUs?
Equity compensation at Motive typically takes the form of incentive stock options (ISOs) and non-qualified stock options (NSOs). Incentive stock options can trigger the alternative minimum tax (AMT) when you exercise.
Are Motive shares eligible for QSBS?
They might be. Qualified small business stock (QSBS) under Internal Revenue Code Section 1202 can exclude federal tax on much of the gain when shares were acquired at original issuance from a C-corporation while its gross assets were under $50 million, and held at least five years. Whether your Motive shares qualify turns on when you acquired them and the company's asset size at that time.
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