RSU Dividend Equivalents Tax Calculator 2026 — DER Ordinary Income

Calculate taxes on RSU Dividend Equivalent Rights. See how DERs are taxed as ordinary W-2 income with FICA — not as qualified dividends — and compare the tax difference.

RSU & Dividend Details

$
Annual dividend declared on stock
Number of vesting events (e.g., 4 quarterly vests)
%
$0
Total DERs Received
$0
FICA Tax on DERs
$0
Total Tax on DERs
$0
After-Tax DER Income

DER Tax Breakdown

Why RSU Dividend Equivalents Are Taxed Differently

Regular dividends on stock you own can qualify for the preferential 0%/15%/20% rate. But RSU Dividend Equivalent Rights represent compensation from your employer for unvested shares. Under Section 83 of the tax code, they are taxed as ordinary income when paid — with full FICA withholding applied. This treatment is confirmed by IRS Notice 2002-56.

The Formula

Total DERs = RSU Shares × Dividend per Share × Vesting Periods
FICA Tax = DERs × (6.2% SS [if applicable] + 1.45% Medicare [+ 0.9% additional if applicable])
Income Tax = DERs × (Federal Rate + State Rate)
Total Tax = Income Tax + FICA Tax
After-Tax DER = Total DERs − Total Tax

Example

2,000 RSUs, $2.50 annual dividend, 4 quarterly vesting periods, 24% federal, 6% state:
Total DERs: 2,000 × $2.50 = $5,000
FICA (7.65%): $5,000 × 7.65% = $382
Income tax (24% + 6% = 30%): $5,000 × 30% = $1,500
Total tax: $1,882 | After-tax DER: $3,118
Extended

DER vs Qualified Dividends Comparison & Multi-Year Table

See exactly how much extra tax you pay on DERs vs qualified dividends with SVG bar chart and annual accumulation table

Compare the actual tax burden on DERs versus what you would pay if these were qualified dividends on stock you already own. Multi-year accumulation table included.

%

DER Tax vs Qualified Dividend Tax per Year

YearRSU DERsTax as DERTax as Qualified DivExtra Tax on DERAfter-Tax (DER)

Frequently Asked Questions

What are RSU Dividend Equivalent Rights (DERs)?
Dividend Equivalent Rights are features in RSU grant agreements that entitle the holder to receive cash (or additional RSUs) equal to the dividends paid on the underlying stock during the vesting period. Many technology and financial companies include DERs in their equity compensation plans. DERs track what you would have received if you already owned the shares.
How are RSU dividend equivalents taxed?
RSU dividend equivalents are taxed as ordinary W-2 income at vesting — NOT as qualified dividends. This is a critical distinction. Ordinary dividends on stock you own can qualify for the 15%/20% preferential rate, but DERs on unvested RSUs are treated as compensation income subject to ordinary income rates plus FICA (Social Security and Medicare). They cannot qualify for the lower dividend rate.
Why cannot RSU dividend equivalents be treated as qualified dividends?
To qualify for the lower 15%/20% dividend rate, you must own the stock and meet holding period requirements. With unvested RSUs, you do not actually own the shares — you only have a contractual right to receive them in the future. The DER payment is therefore compensation income under Section 83, not a return on investment. This is confirmed by IRS Notice 2002-56.
Are RSU dividend equivalents subject to FICA taxes?
Yes. Because DERs are treated as ordinary W-2 compensation, they are subject to FICA withholding — Social Security (6.2% up to the wage base of $176,100 in 2026) and Medicare (1.45%, plus 0.9% additional Medicare tax on wages above $200K single/$250K MFJ). This is in addition to federal and state income tax withholding.
How does the tax on RSU dividend equivalents compare to owning the stock directly?
If you received the RSU shares immediately and held them, any dividends paid would be qualified dividends taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% plus potential 3.8% NIIT — but NOT FICA. With DERs, you pay ordinary income rates (22%-37%) PLUS FICA (7.65%). On a $10,000 DER at a 24% ordinary rate plus 5% state plus FICA, you pay roughly $3,665 in tax versus roughly $2,000-$2,380 for qualified dividends. The difference can be substantial.