HR-1199-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
What it does
This bill would modify the tax exclusion for qualified small business stock (QSBS) in three ways. First, it would reduce the holding period required to claim a partial gain exclusion — from five years to three years for a 50% exclusion, four years for 75%, and five years for the existing 100% exclusion. Second, it would allow stock acquired by converting a qualified convertible debt instrument (such as a bond converted to equity) to count as QSBS, with the holding period including the time the debt instrument was held. Third, it would expand QSBS eligibility beyond C corporation stock to include stock in other corporate forms, subject to limitations.
Who benefits
Individual (noncorporate) investors in small businesses who sell qualifying stock after shorter holding periods. Angel investors and early-stage venture capital participants who hold convertible notes and later convert them to equity. Founders and employees of startups organized as S corporations or other non-C-corporation structures who were previously ineligible. Small businesses seeking to attract investment, as the more favorable tax treatment may make their equity more appealing. Startup ecosystems in regions outside major venture capital hubs, where investors may be less willing to commit capital for five or more years.
Who is hurt
The federal government would collect less revenue from capital gains on qualifying small business stock sales, potentially requiring offsetting cuts or adding to the deficit. Investors in larger corporations or non-qualifying businesses receive no comparable benefit, creating an uneven playing field. Taxpayers broadly may bear indirect costs if the revenue reduction is not offset. Tax professionals and compliance systems would face transition costs adapting to the new holding period tiers and expanded eligibility rules.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current five-year holding requirement discourages early-stage investment by locking up capital for too long, particularly in a high-risk asset class where many startups fail within that window. They contend that expanding QSBS to convertible debt instruments reflects how modern startup financing actually works — most early investors use convertible notes, not direct equity — and that excluding this common instrument from QSBS eligibility is an outdated gap. They further argue that broadening eligibility to non-C-corporation stock removes an arbitrary structural barrier that disadvantages small businesses organized in other legal forms.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the QSBS exclusion already provides an extraordinarily generous benefit — up to 100% capital gains exclusion — that disproportionately flows to wealthy investors and venture-backed founders rather than typical small business owners or workers. They contend that shortening the holding period reduces the policy rationale of rewarding long-term patient capital, potentially encouraging short-term speculation in small business equity. They further argue that expanding eligibility to additional corporate forms and convertible instruments will erode the tax base and primarily benefit high-income individuals in technology and finance sectors who are already well-positioned to access these investments.