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A capitalization table (cap table) is a spreadsheet or database that records all ownership stakes in a company, including who owns what, how many shares they hold, what type of shares they own (common or various series of preferred), the price paid for those shares, and the resulting ownership percentage. The cap table is one of the most important legal and financial documents for any startup — it determines who gets paid what in any liquidation or exit scenario, tracks dilution across all financing events, and is required for every investor due diligence process. A complete cap table tracks multiple share classes simultaneously. Common shares are the basic equity unit, typically held by founders and early employees. Preferred shares are held by investors and carry special rights: liquidation preference (paid before common in any exit), anti-dilution protection, and dividend rights. Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) are promises to issue shares upon vesting, typically for employees at later-stage companies. Stock options give holders the right to buy shares at a fixed strike price. Warrants are similar to options but are typically issued to investors or service providers. Fully diluted ownership is the most important ownership calculation for understanding relative stakes. It assumes all options (granted and ungranted), all warrants, and all convertible instruments (SAFEs, convertible notes) have been exercised or converted. This gives the true picture of relative ownership, since all these instruments will eventually become shares. Basic (undiluted) share counts are useful for some calculations but significantly overstate founders' actual ownership position. Cap tables evolve through a series of transactions: initial founder share issuance (often at a nominal price like $0.0001/share), option pool creation, SAFE and convertible note issuances, priced rounds (with the associated SAFE/note conversions), option grants and exercises, transfers and secondary sales, and ultimately, exit or IPO. Each transaction must be recorded precisely with accurate share counts, prices, and dates, as errors compound and can create significant legal and tax problems. The waterfall analysis is the cap table's most critical output for founders: it shows, for any given exit valuation, exactly what each shareholder receives after applying liquidation preferences, participation rights, conversion rights, and distribution rules. Understanding the waterfall helps founders assess whether the company's current capital structure fairly rewards founders and employees in realistic exit scenarios, or whether the accumulated liquidation preferences and participating preferred rights have significantly diminished common stockholder economics.
See calculator interface for applicable formulas and inputs. This formula calculates cap table calc by relating the input variables through their mathematical relationship. Each component represents a measurable quantity that can be independently verified.
- 1Establish the founding share structure: total authorized shares, founder share counts, and par value per share (often $0.0001 for Delaware corporations).
- 2Record all financing events in chronological order: SAFE issuances, convertible note issuances, priced rounds (with price per share, new shares issued, and pre/post-money valuation).
- 3Calculate SAFE and convertible note conversions at each priced round, adding the resulting shares to the appropriate share class.
- 4Maintain a running option pool: track authorized pool size, total granted options (by grant date and strike price), vested vs. unvested grants, and exercised options.
- 5Calculate fully diluted share totals by summing common shares, preferred shares (on as-converted basis), all options (granted and ungranted), and all warrants.
- 6Compute ownership percentages for each shareholder on both a basic and fully diluted basis.
- 7Run a waterfall analysis for 3-5 hypothetical exit scenarios to understand what each shareholder receives at different valuation levels.
Founder A: 5M/12.5M = 40%; Seed investors: 2M/12.5M = 16%; option pool: 1M/12.5M = 8%.
This seed-stage cap table shows a healthy structure with founders retaining substantial ownership. Fully diluted shares: 5M (founder A) + 4M (founder B) + 2M (seed investors) + 0.5M (SAFE conversion) + 1M (option pool) = 12.5M. Founder A: 40%. Founder B: 32%. Seed investors: 16%. SAFE investor: 4%. Option pool: 8%. The 8% unissued option pool is appropriate for a seed stage company — enough to attract key early hires without over-diluting founders prematurely. If a Series A is raised at a $20M pre-money valuation with a new 15% post-money option pool, founders' combined ownership will drop to approximately 50-55%, still healthy for Series A.
Series A shares: $8M / $2.40 = 3.33M new shares; plus 2M new option pool shares pre-money.
The Series A investment at $2.40/share issues 3.33M new shares. The 2M share option pool increase is created pre-money (diluting founders before Series A pricing). Post-round total: 12.5M + 2M (new pool pre-money added to pre-round total before pricing) + 3.33M (Series A shares) = actually: pre-money diluted = 14.5M; Series A price = $8M / 14.5M... let's use the given $2.40/share so new shares = 3.33M. Post-round: 12.5M + 2M option pool + 3.33M Series A = 17.83M shares. Founders combined (9M shares): 9M / 17.83M = 50.5%. Series A investors (3.33M): 18.7%. Total option pool (3M): 16.8%. SAFE (0.5M): 2.8%. This structure is typical post-Series A — founders still hold majority, investors hold ~20%, with a healthy option pool for future hires.
With 1x non-participating preferred, investors compare liquidation preference vs. common value and choose better option.
Waterfall analysis determines actual exit proceeds. The preferred investors have a 1x non-participating liquidation preference: they receive their original investment back before common shareholders. Seed investors: $3M preference. Series A investors: $8M preference. Total preference: $11M. Remaining $9M distributed pro-rata among all common (converted preferred). However, 1x non-participating means preferred investors choose: take their preference OR convert to common. If they take preference: $11M to preferred, $9M to common. Common per share: $9M / 14.5M common shares = $0.62/share. If they convert: $20M / 17.83M = $1.12/share x their shares. Series A: 3.33M x $1.12 = $3.73M (vs $8M preference) — take preference. Seed: 2M x $1.12 = $2.24M (vs $3M preference) — take preference. Common holders receive $9M / 9M founders = $1.00/share. At this exit, investors take their preferences and founders share the remaining $9M.
Pool utilization = (1.2M + 600K + 400K) / 3M = 73.3%; 800K ungranted remains.
Tracking option pool utilization helps founders plan future grants and anticipate when they will need to request a pool increase (which requires shareholder approval and creates additional dilution). Of the 3M authorized shares, 2.2M have been committed (1.2M unvested + 600K vested + 400K exercised), leaving 800K (26.7%) as ungranted reserve. At a hiring rate of 200K options per quarter, the pool will be exhausted in approximately 4 quarters. Planning a pool refresh of 1.5M shares before the next board meeting (adding it to the next funding round agenda) ensures continuity of the equity compensation program and avoids a standalone shareholder approval process.
Investor due diligence: providing accurate cap tables to potential Series A/B investors. This application is commonly used by professionals who need precise quantitative analysis to support decision-making, budgeting, and strategic planning in their respective fields
409A valuation inputs: providing share class structure and recent transaction prices. Industry practitioners rely on this calculation to benchmark performance, compare alternatives, and ensure compliance with established standards and regulatory requirements
Employee equity education: explaining option grant value in context of total cap table. Academic researchers and students use this computation to validate theoretical models, complete coursework assignments, and develop deeper understanding of the underlying mathematical principles
Exit proceeds modeling: running waterfall analyses for board decision-making. Financial analysts and planners incorporate this calculation into their workflow to produce accurate forecasts, evaluate risk scenarios, and present data-driven recommendations to stakeholders
Secondary sale negotiations: modeling dilution impact of proposed secondary transactions. This application is commonly used by professionals who need precise quantitative analysis to support decision-making, budgeting, and strategic planning in their respective fields
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in cap table calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in cap table calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in cap table calculator calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
| Shareholder Class | Seed Stage | Series A | Series B | Series C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Founders (combined) | 70-85% | 50-65% | 35-50% | 25-40% |
| Seed Investors | 10-20% | 7-15% | 5-10% | 3-7% |
| Series A Investors | 0% | 18-25% | 13-18% | 9-13% |
| Series B Investors | 0% | 0% | 18-25% | 13-18% |
| Series C Investors | 0% | 0% | 0% | 15-22% |
| Employee Option Pool | 10-15% | 12-18% | 15-20% | 15-20% |
What information does a cap table contain?
A complete cap table contains: shareholder names and contact information, share class (common, Series Seed preferred, Series A preferred, etc.), number of shares held, price paid per share, grant date and vesting schedule (for options and restricted stock), total percentage ownership (basic and fully diluted), certificate numbers and legal details, conversion ratios (for preferred to common), and liquidation preferences and other economic rights. Most cap table software (Carta, Pulley, Capshare) also maintains a complete audit trail of every transaction — issuances, transfers, cancellations, exercises — and can generate 409A valuations, Section 409A option grant compliance records, and investor reporting documents.
What is the difference between basic shares and fully diluted shares?
Basic (or undiluted) shares count only the shares that are currently issued and outstanding — founder shares plus shares issued to investors and employees who have exercised options. Fully diluted shares add all potential shares: unexercised stock options (vested and unvested), unissued option pool, warrants, and convertible instruments (SAFEs, notes) on an as-converted basis. Fully diluted share counts are typically 15-30% higher than basic shares for early-stage companies with large option pools. Investors always calculate ownership on a fully diluted basis, and founders should always model their ownership on a fully diluted basis to understand their true economic position.
What is a 409A valuation and why is it important for cap tables?
A 409A valuation is an independent appraisal of a private company's common stock fair market value, required by Internal Revenue Code Section 409A for setting the exercise price of stock options. Options must be granted at or above fair market value to avoid punitive tax treatment for employees (immediate income recognition plus a 20% penalty tax). For startups, the 409A valuation is almost always significantly below the preferred share price paid by investors (due to the liquidation preferences and other rights that preferred shares carry). Companies must obtain a new 409A valuation at least every 12 months, or within 90 days of a material event (new funding round, major business development milestone) that could affect valuation. 409A appraisals typically cost $1,000-$5,000 from qualified valuation providers.
How does a liquidation preference waterfall work?
A liquidation preference waterfall determines the order and amount each shareholder receives in an acquisition, merger, or dissolution. In a typical structure, preferred shareholders receive their liquidation preference (their original investment back, or 1x-2x their investment for more aggressive terms) before any proceeds are distributed to common shareholders. Non-participating preferred means investors choose between taking their preference OR converting to common and sharing proportionally. Participating preferred means investors take their preference AND then participate in the remaining proceeds as if converted to common (double dipping). Multiple liquidation preference stacks in Series A, B, and C create a complex waterfall that dramatically reduces common stockholder proceeds at lower exit valuations — founders and employees may receive nothing in exits below the total liquidation preference stack.
What software should startups use to manage their cap table?
Cap table software is essential after any significant financing event. The leading options are Carta (most widely used; comprehensive features including 409A valuations, ESOP administration, and investor reporting; used by 40,000+ companies), Pulley (Y Combinator backed; startup-friendly pricing; strong integrations), Capshare (now part of Carta), and Shoobx (now Fidelity Private Shares). For very early-stage companies (pre-seed, before any significant financing), a spreadsheet is acceptable but should be migrated to proper software before the seed round closes. Excel/Google Sheets cap tables become error-prone and legally risky once there are multiple share classes, option grants, and convertible instruments to track.
When should a founder request a secondary sale of their shares?
Founder secondary sales — where founders sell some of their existing shares to new investors rather than the company raising primary capital — are increasingly common at later stages. Most venture investors require founder consent (and sometimes co-sale rights) for secondary transactions. Secondary sales are typically permitted beginning at Series B or C, and often structured so founders can sell 10-20% of their holdings in conjunction with a new round. The main benefits are providing founders with personal liquidity without requiring an exit, and reducing the incentive pressure that can lead to premature exits. Investors generally support modest founder secondaries because founders with some liquidity are less anxious about timing exits for personal financial reasons.
What are pro-rata rights and how do they affect the cap table?
Pro-rata rights (also called preemptive rights or rights of first refusal) give existing investors the right to invest in future rounds to maintain their ownership percentage. If an investor holds 10% post-Series A, pro-rata rights allow them to invest 10% of the Series B round to maintain that 10% stake. Super pro-rata rights allow investors to invest more than their ownership percentage would suggest. Pro-rata rights must be allocated across all investors who hold them, which can crowd out new lead investors if many existing investors exercise pro-rata. For this reason, Series B and C lead investors often require that existing investors waive or reduce their pro-rata rights as a condition of leading the round, creating complex investor negotiations.
Pro Tip
Maintain a single source of truth for your cap table in dedicated software (Carta, Pulley, or Capshare) — using spreadsheets for cap table management after Series A leads to errors in share counts, tax compliance failures, and investor reporting issues.
Did you know?
Carta manages cap tables for over 40,000 companies representing more than $2.5 trillion in equity, and their data shows that the average employee at a Series B startup owns less than 0.1% of the company — a reminder that individual option grants need to be contextualized against exit valuations, not just ownership percentages.