You build a startup. You grind for years. You finally sell it for $20 million. Then you open the tax bill and your stomach drops. The IRS wants a big chunk. A painful chunk.
But what if I told you there’s a rule—four letters—that could make a huge part of that tax bill disappear on the federal side? Sometimes close to zero on millions of dollars in profit.
The rule is called QSBS. Qualified Small Business Stock. And if you’re a startup founder, an early employee with equity, or a tech company owner, this might be the most valuable thing you read all year. Especially now—because the law just got better.
Let me keep this dead simple. QSBS is a tax rule that says: if you own stock in a small company, and you follow certain rules, and you hold that stock long enough, the government may not tax a big portion of your profit when you sell.
Think of it like a golden ticket. You earn it early by doing the boring setup steps right. Then years later, when you sell your company or your shares, that ticket protects a huge piece of your gain from federal taxes.
And here’s the news that matters right now. A new law called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act made QSBS significantly stronger for stock issued after July 4, 2025. Three big upgrades happened.
QSBS isn’t complicated, but it is specific. Miss one rule and the golden ticket is gone. Here’s how it works in plain English.
Let me show you how this actually plays out. No jargon. Just dollars.
Say you build a property management app. Real estate tech. You set up a C-corp on January 1, 2026. That same day, the company issues you founder stock. Clean documents. Clean records. The QSBS clock starts ticking.
You grind for three years. You grow. You get real clients. You build a real team. Then on January 1, 2029, a bigger company makes an offer. Your profit on the stock is $20 million.
Without QSBS, that $20 million gets hit with federal capital gains tax. At current rates, that could be north of $4 million going to the IRS. Not fun.
With QSBS under the new law, here’s how it could look. The new cap is $15 million for qualifying stock. At year three, the step system allows 50% of that cap. So up to $7.5 million of your gain could be tax-free on the federal side. That’s roughly $1.5 million in federal tax you don’t pay.
Hold to year four? The step jumps to 75%—up to $11.25 million protected. Hold to year five? It’s 100%—the full $15 million cap could be shielded.
Is it always exactly like that? No. Don’t be sloppy—there are rules and details that matter. But that’s the big idea. The new law made QSBS bigger and faster for new stock.
Now the part nobody likes hearing.
QSBS is a federal rule. States play by their own rules. And if you live in California—which many of my clients do—California often does not follow QSBS. That means you can win big on the federal side and still owe California state tax on the full gain.
I know. It’s annoying. But that’s the game. And it’s exactly why you need a CPA who understands both sides of this—the federal benefit and the state reality. Knowing this upfront lets you plan for it instead of being blindsided at the closing table.
Here’s what I see all the time in my practice. Founders build fast. They sell. They raise money. They focus on clients. They’re doing everything right on the business side. But they ignore the boring legal and tax setup stuff. Then they get an offer to sell, and they find out the golden ticket is missing.
The stock wasn’t issued cleanly. The cap table is a mess. The entity was an LLC for the first two years. The records are trash. And now it’s too late to fix it.
QSBS can’t be done retroactively. You can’t earn the golden ticket after the movie is over. The clock starts the day the stock is issued—and every rule has to be in place from that moment forward.
So here’s what I want you to do this week.
Does QSBS work for S-corps or LLCs?
No. QSBS only applies to C-corporations. If your company is an LLC or S-corp, you’d need to convert to a C-corp first, and the QSBS clock only starts after the conversion. This is why entity choice matters from day one.
What changed with the One Big Beautiful Bill Act?
For stock issued after July 4, 2025, the tax-free gain cap increased from $10M to $15M, the qualifying asset limit went from $50M to $75M, and a new step system lets you get partial benefits starting at year three instead of waiting the full five years.
Can real estate companies qualify for QSBS?
It depends on what the company does. Real estate tech companies—like property management software, smart home platforms, or data tools—can potentially qualify. But companies whose primary activity is holding, buying, or selling real estate typically do not. The distinction is between a tech company serving real estate and a real estate investment company.
If you’re a founder, early-stage employee, or tech company owner, QSBS could save you millions—but only if the setup is done right from the start.
Book a free Startup Tax & Equity Review call with me. We’ll check your entity type, review your stock docs, and make sure the QSBS clock is ticking in your favor—before it’s too late.

Samy Basta brings you more than 20 years experience in tax, financial, and business consulting to his role as founder of Basta & Company. His focus is primarily strategic business planning, empowering clients to set priorities, focus energy and resources, and strengthen operations. In addition, Samy and his firm provide strategic counsel, and technical insight, on a wide range of needs, including tax saving strategies, tax return compliance, as well as choice of entity.