QSBS Gross Assets Test ($50M → $75M): Section 1202 Qualification Guide

Written by Peyton Carr, Co-Founder, Financial Advisor

The aggregate gross assets test is where many founders lose millions in QSBS benefits without knowing why. You held stock for five years (or, for QSBS issued after July 4, 2025, potentially three+ years for partial exclusion) and now face a $40 million personal exit, only to discover that a Series B raise technically disqualified your shares from Section 1202 treatment.

Understanding the gross assets test isn’t just about knowing the thresholds. It’s about recognizing when your company crossed those lines, how to measure correctly, and what strategic moves preserve QSBS eligibility.

In this guide, you’ll learn:

  • How the aggregate gross assets test works and when it’s measured
  • Why the $50M to $75M threshold change creates new opportunities for later-stage startups
  • The critical difference between tax basis and fair market value in calculating aggregate gross assets
  • Practical strategies for managing assets to stay below the threshold

What Is the QSBS Aggregate Gross Assets Test?

The aggregate gross assets test is one of Section 1202’s fundamental requirements.

For your stock to qualify for QSBS treatment, the corporation’s aggregate gross assets cannot exceed specific thresholds at key moments:

  • At all times after August 10, 1993 and before the stock issuance
  • Immediately before and immediately after the stock issuance (including cash/property received in the issuance)

The IRS defines “aggregate gross assets” as the amount of cash plus the aggregate adjusted tax basis of other property held by the corporation.

Here’s what makes this complex: Your GAAP balance sheet doesn’t match your Section 1202 balance sheet. Fair market value doesn’t matter for most assets; only adjusted tax basis (including special Section 1202 rules for certain contributed/carryover-basis property).

A company with $200 million in enterprise value could have aggregate gross assets under $75 million if it has significant self-created intellectual property (often low or zero tax basis) and expenses R&E costs immediately.

The July 4, 2025, Threshold Increase

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act increased the threshold from $50 million to $75 million for stock issued (acquired at original issuance) after July 4, 2025 (i.e., beginning July 5, 2025). This 50% increase represents the most significant expansion of QSBS eligibility since 1993.

Stock Issuance Date Aggregate Gross Assets Threshold Status
On or before July 4, 2025 $50 million Previous limit
On or after July 5, 2025 $75 million Current limit
2027 and beyond Indexed for inflation Future adjustments*

*For QSBS acquired after July 4, 2025, both the $75 million aggregate gross assets threshold and the $15 million per-issuer flat gain cap are indexed for inflation beginning in 2027.

What this means:

  • A Series B company that raised $60 million in 2024 couldn’t issue QSBS (exceeded $50M threshold)
  • That same company raising in late 2025 can issue QSBS if aggregate gross assets stay below $75M
  • Companies that aged out of QSBS eligibility now have more runway through later rounds

When the Test Is Measured

The aggregate gross assets test is generally a point-in-time measurement at issuance.

Testing Moment Requirement Impact of Failure
Before Issuance Assets must not exceed the threshold at any time from August 10, 1993 forward If aggregate gross assets ever exceeded the applicable statutory limit before the issuance, the corporation generally cannot issue QSBS subject to that limit thereafter (but note the post–July 4, 2025 $75M threshold may reopen eligibility for some companies that exceeded $50M but never exceeded $75M).
Immediately After Issuance Assets must not exceed the threshold, including cash/property from the issuance Stock issued does not qualify as QSBS

Before Issuance: Your corporation’s aggregate gross assets must not have exceeded the threshold at any time from August 10, 1993, until stock is issued. If your company exceeded $50 million in October 2023, it could not issue QSBS under that $50 million threshold, even if assets dropped to $30 million later.

Immediately After Issuance: The IRS looks at aggregate gross assets immediately after stock issuance, including cash or property received. A company with $60 million before raising capital cannot receive $20 million if that pushes aggregate gross assets above $75 million.

Key point: Once stock passes the test at issuance, subsequent increases generally don’t affect that stock’s QSBS status. Shares issued when the company had $40 million in aggregate gross assets remain QSBS, even if the company later grows to $200 million in aggregate gross assets.

How to Calculate Aggregate Gross Assets

Most founders miscalculate because they use GAAP statements or confuse enterprise value with tax basis.

Formula: Aggregate Gross Assets = Cash + Adjusted Tax Basis of Other Property

What Counts (and What Doesn’t)

Asset Category Included? Valuation Method
Cash in bank accounts ✓ Yes Dollar amount
Borrowed cash ✓ Yes Full amount (debt not subtracted)
Purchased equipment ✓ Yes Adjusted tax basis after depreciation
Real property ✓ Yes Adjusted tax basis
Property contributed where the corporation takes a carryover basis ✓ Yes FMV for gross-assets test (special rule)
Inventory ✓ Yes Tax basis
Self-created software/IP ✓ Yes (but often $0) Included, typically $0 adjusted tax basis if costs were deducted; may be >$0 if acquired or capitalized
Goodwill (organic) ✓ Yes (but often $0) Included, typically $0 tax basis unless purchased
Expensed R&E costs ✓ Yes (but often $0) $0 basis because deducted; capitalized/amortized R&E produces basis
Liabilities/debt ✗ No Not subtracted from assets

The Contributed Property Rule

Section 1202(d)(2)(B) creates a critical valuation rule: When property is contributed to a corporation in exchange for stock and the corporation’s basis is determined (in whole or in part) by reference to the transferor’s basis, the adjusted basis equals its fair market value for the gross assets test.

Example: You transfer a business to a newly formed C-corp in exchange for stock. Even if your tax basis in the business is $2 million, if the business is worth $8 million at the time of the transfer, the company generally must count $8 million (FMV) toward the Section 1202 aggregate gross assets test, not $2 million.

The Research & Experimentation Advantage

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act enacted new Section 174A, which allows immediate expensing for domestic R&E expenditures for tax years beginning after December 31, 2024.

This creates a massive advantage for tech startups. The impact is:

  • Expensed R&E has zero tax basis
  • Aggregate gross assets decrease dramatically
  • OBBBA’s Section 174A includes transition rules and, for eligible small businesses, an election that may allow retroactive expensing of certain domestic R&E for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2021 (often implemented via amended returns or other prescribed procedures)

Example (illustrative): A SaaS company with $52 million in aggregate gross assets in 2023 (including $8M capitalized R&E) may be able to reduce tax basis in capitalized domestic R&E under applicable transition rules, which could affect the aggregate gross assets computation for certain issuance dates. This needs careful analysis and documentation.

Can You Raise More Than $75 Million and Still Issue QSBS?

Yes. The test measures aggregate gross assets (cash + adjusted tax basis of property), not total capital raised over the company’s life. A corporation can raise more than $75 million in the aggregate and still issue QSBS at later issuance dates, as long as it stays below the applicable threshold immediately before and immediately after each stock issuance.

A corporation can also keep aggregate gross assets lower by spending cash on deductible operating expenses such as:

  • Expensed R&E costs
  • Salaries and compensation
  • Marketing and sales expenses
  • Operating costs (including third-party cloud hosting/subscriptions)

Example: A B2B SaaS company raises $90 million across multiple rounds. Because it routinely spends down cash on payroll, marketing, and third-party cloud hosting/subscriptions (rather than accumulating cash or building high-basis assets), its aggregate gross assets at certain issuance dates remain relatively low, allowing it to continue issuing QSBS (assuming the company is below the threshold immediately before and immediately after the relevant issuance).

Funding Round Amount Raised Cumulative Raised Aggregate Gross Assets (at a later issuance date after spending down cash)
Seed (Feb 2024) $5M $5M $4M
Series A (Nov 2024) $25M $30M $18M
Series B (Mar 2026) $60M $90M $26M

Despite raising $90M total, the company’s aggregate gross assets at these later issuance dates remain at $26M because funds were spent on expensed items (payroll, marketing, and cloud hosting/subscriptions).

Note: Immediately after a financing closes, aggregate gross assets will often spike because the new cash counts, so timing and spend-down matter.

Common Mistakes That Cost Millions

Mistake What Founders Do Wrong Correct Approach
Using GAAP balance sheets Rely on audited financials that don’t track adjusted tax basis (and don’t apply the special 1202 gross-assets rules) Prepare Section 1202-specific tax basis balance sheet
Ignoring contributed property Track carryover basis instead of FMV Use FMV for contributed/carryover-basis property in aggregate gross assets calculation
Confusing enterprise value Assume $500M valuation = high assets Focus only on cash + adjusted tax basis (ignore valuation)
Overlooking debt-financed assets Think debt reduces aggregate gross assets Include full asset value; liabilities don’t reduce total

What Happens If You Fail the Test?

The aggregate gross assets test is binary: pass or fail. If stock was issued when aggregate gross assets exceeded the threshold, that stock never qualifies as QSBS.

Tax Impact Comparison: $30M Founder Gain

Based on $30 million of capital gain.

Assumption: This illustration assumes the gain is fully excludable under the applicable $10M / $15M flat cap or the 10x basis limitation (and that all other QSBS requirements are satisfied). Outcomes vary significantly depending on basis, cap usage, and whether the stock is subject to the post–July 4, 2025 tiered holding-period regime.

Tax Component With QSBS (100% excluded case) Without QSBS Difference
Federal capital gains tax $0 $6,000,000 $6,000,000
Net Investment Income Tax $0 $1,140,000 $1,140,000
Total Federal Tax $0 $7,140,000 $7,140,000

If only the $10M (or $15M) flat cap applies (and the 10x basis limitation doesn’t increase the cap), a $30M gain would generally leave $20M (or $15M) taxable.

State taxes: Many states conform, but California does not conform to the federal QSBS exclusion (and does not conform to Section 1045 deferral), so state tax may still apply even when federal tax is reduced or eliminated.

Generally, you cannot fix a failed test. Once stock is issued when aggregate gross assets exceeded the applicable threshold, that stock cannot become QSBS later, even if assets decrease. However, the increase from $50M to $75M under the OBBBA creates a new opportunity: corporations that previously exceeded $50M (and thus couldn’t issue QSBS under the $50M limit) may now issue QSBS if their aggregate gross assets have not exceeded $75M.

Strategic Planning for Growing Companies

Asset Management Strategies

Strategy How It Helps Example
Hold assets separately Keeps non-core assets off balance sheet License IP from holding company instead of owning directly
Lease vs. purchase Leased assets don’t count in aggregate gross assets Lease office space, equipment, vehicles
Accelerate expensing Reduces tax basis immediately Section 179, bonus depreciation, R&E expensing
Time asset purchases Preserves QSBS qualification at issuance Delay equipment purchases until after equity round closes

Monitoring Checklist

Establish ongoing monitoring:

  • Quarterly Section 1202 balance sheet updates
  • Alert system at 80% of threshold
  • Documentation for all equity issuances
  • Regular review of subsidiary structures

Why This Matters More in 2026

The $75 million threshold, restored R&E expensing, and growing QSBS awareness make the aggregate gross assets test more strategically important than ever.

More companies qualify: Series B and C stage companies can issue QSBS where they couldn’t before.

Larger savings: The per-issuer exclusion cap increased to $15 million (from $10 million) for post–July 4, 2025 stock, indexed for inflation beginning in 2027.

Greater scrutiny expected: As QSBS benefits become more valuable, IRS audit activity will likely increase.

Getting Professional Guidance

The aggregate gross assets test combines tax basis calculations, property valuation, and timing considerations. Getting this wrong means discovering a $7+ million tax bill you thought QSBS would eliminate.

Work with a Section 1202 specialist to:

  • Reconstruct historical aggregate gross assets for all issuance dates
  • Validate compliance documentation
  • Assess whether Section 174A transition relief could impact aggregate gross assets computations for certain historical issuance dates

The aggregate gross assets test is technical and unforgiving, which is why founders who master it gain millions that others leave on the table.

Ready to optimize your QSBS strategy?

The aggregate gross assets test is one of multiple Section 1202 requirements that must align perfectly. At Keystone, we help tech founders navigate the complete QSBS landscape from initial stock issuance through exit planning.

Schedule a consultation to discuss your specific situation.

Disclaimer

The information and opinions provided in this material are for general informational purposes only and should not be considered as tax, financial, investment, or legal advice. The information is not intended to replace professional advice from qualified professionals in your jurisdiction.

Tax laws and regulations are complex and subject to change, and their application can vary widely based on the specific facts and circumstances involved. Any tax information or advice in this article is not intended to be, and should not be, used as a substitute for specific tax advice from a qualified tax professional.

Investment advice in this article is based on the general principles of finance and investing and may not be suitable for all individuals or circumstances. Investments can go up or down in value, and there is always the potential of losing money when you invest. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial professional who is familiar with your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance.

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