What is a 409A Valuation?
A 409A valuation — named after Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code — is a formal, independent appraisal of the fair market value (FMV) of a private company's common stock. For startups, it is the foundational document that allows you to legally grant stock options to employees at a defensible strike price.
Unlike preferred stock sold to investors, common stock (the kind held by founders and employees) must be independently valued before options can be issued. The 409A valuation is that independent assessment. It is not an estimate of your company's total enterprise value — it specifically determines the FMV of your common stock on a minority, non-marketable basis.
Why Does Your Startup Need a 409A Valuation?
Under IRC Section 409A, any stock option granted to an employee with a strike price below the fair market value of common stock is considered "deferred compensation." This triggers severe and immediate tax consequences:
- The full spread (difference between strike price and FMV) is taxed as ordinary income in the year of vesting — even if the employee has not sold any shares
- An additional 20% federal excise tax is applied on top of ordinary income tax
- Many states (including California) add a further 20% state penalty
- These taxes apply to all unvested options, creating a significant cash burden for employees
A properly conducted 409A valuation provides "safe harbor" protection — if you follow the methodology and use a qualified independent appraiser, the IRS will generally accept your strike prices as compliant without challenge.
How Does the 409A Valuation Process Work?
The valuation process typically follows these steps:
- Data collection: The appraiser gathers your financials, cap table, recent funding terms, market comparables, and company overview
- Methodology selection: The appraiser selects IRS-recognized approaches — typically market approach (revenue or ARR multiples), income approach (DCF), and/or asset approach depending on your stage
- Equity allocation: For companies with preferred stock, an Option Pricing Model (OPM) or Probability-Weighted Expected Return Method (PWERM) allocates total equity value between share classes
- DLOM application: A Discount for Lack of Marketability (DLOM) is applied to reflect that private company shares are illiquid
- Report delivery: A formal written report is produced that can withstand IRS scrutiny and auditor review
Who Can Perform a 409A Valuation?
To qualify for safe harbor treatment, the IRS requires the appraisal to be conducted by a "qualified independent appraiser" — defined as someone with significant knowledge, experience, education, and training in performing similar valuations. In practice, this means:
- Certified Valuation Analysts (CVA)
- Accredited in Business Valuation (ABV) credential holders
- Certified Public Accountants (CPA) with business valuation expertise
- Chartered Financial Analysts (CFA) with relevant experience
Importantly, the appraiser must be independent — company insiders, founders, or investors in the company cannot conduct the valuation.
How Often Do You Need a 409A Valuation?
A 409A valuation is valid for 12 months, or until a "material event" occurs — whichever comes first. Material events that trigger the need for a new valuation include:
- Closing a new funding round (any Series)
- Receiving a significant acquisition offer
- A major change in financial performance (significant revenue increase or decrease)
- A substantial change in business model or strategy
- Completing a major product launch or milestone
Most startups update their 409A annually or immediately after closing a funding round to ensure new option grants remain compliant.
What Does a 409A Valuation Cost?
Costs vary significantly by funding stage and complexity:
- Pre-Seed: $1,500 — Asset-based approach, simple cap table, fast turnaround
- Seed: $2,000 — DCF + market comparables, auditor support included
- Series A: $3,500 — Full OPM analysis, Big 4 audit-ready report
- Series B: $5,000 — Comprehensive PWERM/OPM, scenario analysis
- Series C+: $7,500–$10,000 — Enterprise-grade analysis, partner review
Traditional Big 4 accounting firms charge $15,000–$50,000+ for the same service. Specialized 409A valuation firms like 409A Valuation Pro deliver the same quality at a fraction of the cost due to efficient, tech-enabled workflows.