Stock options, once the hallmark of Korea’s startup talent strategy, are losing traction. As venture funding cools and IPOs stall, new data show a sharp 29% decline in stock option recipients over two years. This drop reveals deeper structural challenges—where outdated taxation and regulatory friction now risk weakening Korea’s innovation economy.
Startup Stock Option Recipients Drop Sharply Amid Market Downturn
According to data submitted by Representative Jang Cheol-min of the Democratic Party to the Ministry of SMEs and Startups (MSS), the number of people receiving stock options in Korean startups has declined for three consecutive years.
Recipients fell from 15,055 in 2022 to 12,051 in 2023, and then to 10,655 in 2024. As of August 2025, only 4,489 employees had been granted stock options, signaling a steeper decline this year. The ministry noted that “2024 and 2025 figures may rise slightly due to delayed filings,” but the overall downward trajectory remains clear.
Analysts attribute the trend to the tightening IPO market and reduced venture liquidity, which have eroded confidence in equity-based compensation.
Funding Slowdown and Policy Stagnation of Korea Venture Investment
The decline coincides with Korea’s extended venture investment downturn. In 2021, startups attracted a record 15.9 trillion KRW (approximately USD 11.5 billion) in funding, fueling aggressive hiring and generous incentive programs.
By contrast, the post-2023 period has seen high interest rates, economic uncertainty, and stricter listing reviews following incidents like the “Fadu case,” which raised scrutiny on startup valuations.
The resulting contraction in IPO exits has diminished the perceived value of stock options, as employees increasingly seek immediate stability over long-term equity gains. And so, for early-stage startups, this means fewer tools to compete for talent against conglomerates or foreign employers.
A Call for Tax Reform for Korea’s Startup Stock Option
Representative Jang Cheol-min emphasized that the issue extends beyond market cycles. He called for stronger tax incentive frameworks to preserve the vitality of Korea’s startup ecosystem, noting,
“To ensure that the energy of the startup market does not fade, we must introduce more active tax support for diverse compensation schemes.”
Industry experts echo this view, arguing that Korea’s current stock option taxation—often triggered upon exercise rather than sale—discourages both employees and startups from using equity as an incentive tool.
Comparative models in the United States and Europe allow deferred taxation or favorable rates, aligning incentives with actual financial realization.
Startup Stock Option Winter: Beyond a Compensation Issue
The drop in stock option adoption highlights a broader policy gap in Korea’s innovation ecosystem. Without flexible tax mechanisms, startups lose one of their few competitive advantages—shared equity growth—especially as venture markets mature and cross-border hiring intensifies.
This challenge is emerging at a time when the Ministry of SMEs and Startups and related agencies are promoting digital transformation, AI innovation, and global expansion programs.
However, sustaining that momentum will require not just technology policy, but also a modernized compensation framework that rewards long-term value creation for the innovators and the real people behind these innovations.
Stronger Tax Incentive Reform: Path Forward for Korea’s Startup Ecosystem
Finally, yes, Korea’s startup landscape is still resilient, but its incentive structures are showing strain. As funding cycles shift and IPOs remain subdued, the government faces mounting pressure to update tax policies and promote a more balanced equity ecosystem.
That is why how policymakers respond in the coming year may determine whether Korea’s next generation of founders and engineers continue to view startups as engines of personal and national growth—or as high-risk bets with limited reward.
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