PagerDuty, Inc. Stock Compensation Guide
PagerDuty, Inc. compensates eligible employees with restricted stock units (RSUs) and an employee stock purchase plan (ESPP). The sections below break down how the RSU grants vest and how the ESPP works, then cover the concentration risk and tax questions that come with holding employer stock.
How PagerDuty, Inc. RSUs work
Vesting schedule
4-year vesting with 1-year cliff (25%), then quarterly thereafter (6.25% per quarter)
Vesting cliff
These grants include a vesting cliff of about 12 months. A cliff means none of the shares in that tranche vest until you reach the cliff date; if you leave before then, the unvested shares are generally forfeited. After the cliff, the remaining shares typically continue vesting on a regular schedule.
Refresh grants
Refresh (or "refresher") grants are common here -- employees often receive additional RSU awards over time on top of their initial grant. New grants start their own vesting schedule, so a long-tenured employee can have several overlapping grants vesting at once.
Tax treatment at vesting
RSUs are generally taxed as ordinary income when they vest, not when they are granted. On each vest date, the fair market value of the shares that vest is treated as supplemental wages and appears on your W-2. From that point, the shares are yours; any later change in price is a capital gain or loss measured from the vest-date value, and how long you hold afterward determines whether that gain is short- or long-term. This is general educational information, not tax advice.
Sell-to-cover mechanics
Because tax is due at vesting, most plans use a "sell-to-cover" arrangement: on the vest date a portion of the newly vested shares is automatically sold to cover withholding, and you keep the rest. It is worth knowing that the default withholding on this supplemental income is often a flat federal rate that can be lower than a high earner's actual marginal rate, which can leave a gap at tax time -- a point covered further in the tax section below.
Additional notes
Standard 4-year cliff schedule inferred from S-1/proxy structure; employee-level specifics not directly confirmed in public filings reviewed
How PagerDuty, Inc.'s ESPP works
Concentration risk: what employees with heavy company stock face
Is a winning stock a reason to keep holding?
Strong past performance is often cited as a reason to diversify rather than concentrate further. Many of the largest single-stock fortunes in market history are also the ones that disappeared. Selling shares to fund a diversified portfolio is a common way investors protect what they've already earned.
How much of a portfolio in one stock is typically considered concentrated?
Many financial planners point to a guideline of keeping any single stock under 10 to 20 percent of total investable assets. Above that level, concentration risk often outweighs the upside, particularly when a paycheck and a portfolio both depend on the same company.
What's the risk of holding company stock long-term?
Employer stock and employment income are correlated. A difficult quarter for the company can affect a portfolio, a bonus, job security, and future equity grants at the same time. Diversification is the standard protection against that kind of compounding downside.
Taxes on RSUs and ESPP shares: what to expect
Why do equity-heavy employees often owe taxes at year-end?
Employers typically withhold 22 percent on supplemental income like RSU vests and ESPP purchases. For employees in higher brackets, actual federal-plus-state tax rates can reach 35 to 40 percent, and the gap shows up as a balance due at filing time.
Are there ways to reduce the tax bill on equity compensation?
Common approaches include spreading large vesting events across calendar years, harvesting capital losses against capital gains, and meeting the qualifying holding period on ESPP shares. The effectiveness of any approach depends on individual income, goals, and the specifics of the equity plan.
Building retirement savings beyond employer stock
What's a common order of operations for excess cash?
A widely cited framework is: capture the full 401(k) match, build an emergency fund, fund an HSA if eligible, pay down high-interest debt, max the 401(k), then move to backdoor Roth IRAs and taxable brokerage. The right order varies by situation, but the framework helps avoid leaving employer benefits unused.
How do short-term and long-term goals fit together?
A common principle is to match the account type to the time horizon. Short-term goals under five years are often held in high-yield savings or short-duration Treasuries. Long-term goals are typically held in diversified equity portfolios. Mismatches in either direction tend to create unnecessary risk or unnecessary drag.
What does diversification typically look like alongside employer stock?
A diversified portfolio usually includes a mix of US stocks, international stocks, and bonds, sometimes with smaller allocations to alternatives. The general principle is that no single position should be large enough to materially change the retirement plan if that position underperforms.
Talk to Zac about your equity comp
Equity compensation touches your cash flow, your concentration in a single stock, and your taxes all at once. If you'd like to think through how your grants fit the rest of your plan, you can schedule a free, no-obligation conversation.
Talk to an advisorEquity compensation details sourced from https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1568100/000162828019003201/exhibit103s-1a1.htm. Last updated June 16, 2026.
This page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment, tax, or legal advice, nor a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Equity compensation terms are drawn from public filings and plan documents and may be incomplete or out of date. You may consider consulting a qualified professional and confirming all details with your employer or plan administrator before making decisions. Waterfall Planning is not affiliated with PagerDuty, Inc..