Founder equity splits. The conversation founders avoid until it is too late.
Many co-founder relationships end badly because the equity split was either avoided entirely or done by quick handshake without a structured conversation. This guide covers the frameworks (equal split, role-based, contribution-weighted, dynamic), the criteria worth considering, how vesting protects everyone, and what to do when one founder leaves. Have this conversation early, document it formally, and the equity question disappears from your future conflicts.
Start here.
Equal split is the default for 2-founder companies in roughly 60% of cases. Simple, removes haggling, signals partnership.
CEO typically receives more equity in role-weighted models. CTO commonly gets 25-40% in 2-founder companies where CEO holds majority.
Founder who started 6 months earlier should get some credit for pre-incorporation work.
Whatever the split, vesting (4-year, 1-year cliff) protects all founders from one leaving early.
Founders Agreement, signed before any real work happens. Includes equity, vesting, IP assignment, decision-making rules.
The full picture.
Why this conversation is hard
Equity carries emotional and financial weight. Asking for more equity feels selfish. Accepting less feels diminishing. Many founders avoid the topic and discover later that resentment accumulated. The professional approach: structured conversation, clear criteria, signed document.
Equal split (50/50, 33/33/33)
Default for partnerships of similar contribution. Pros: simple, no negotiation, equal stakeholders aligned. Cons: ignores differential contributions, can fail when one founder underperforms.
Role-based split
CEO gets more, CTO less, COO less still. Common in 2-founder splits: 60/40 or 55/45 for CEO/CTO. In 3-founder: 50/30/20 or similar.
Contribution-weighted
Score each founder on: idea, technical work, business development, capital contribution, full-time vs part-time, prior work, relationships, risk taken. Assign weights to each factor, calculate splits. More rigorous but feels mechanical.
Dynamic equity (Slicing Pie)
Equity allocates based on actual contributions over time: hours worked, cash invested, etc., tracked in real-time. Adjusts as contributions change. Used by some early-stage companies; difficult to maintain.
Vesting is mandatory
Whatever the split, all founder equity should be subject to vesting (typically 4-year, 1-year cliff). Protects the company and remaining founders if one founder leaves early.
Founders Agreement
Written agreement before substantive work begins. Includes: equity split, vesting schedule, IP assignment (all work product belongs to the company), decision-making rules (majority vs unanimity), what happens on founder departure (good leaver, bad leaver), dispute resolution.
Common failure modes
(1) Postponing the conversation: equity ambiguity poisons relationships. (2) Verbal agreement only: memories diverge as stakes rise. (3) No vesting: one founder leaves with 50%, leaving remaining founder with 50% of a company that needs more equity to raise capital. (4) Ignoring future hires: leaving no equity for future co-founders or key hires.
What if we get it wrong?
You can renegotiate later, but the friction is high. Better to discuss explicitly that the initial split is a "current best estimate" and revisit in 6-12 months as roles solidify. Some founders do an explicit re-up at 6 months.
Common questions.
Is 50/50 always the right split for two founders?
How much equity should the technical founder get?
Should the idea person get more equity?
What if one founder invested cash and another contributed work?
What about future founders or key hires?
Can we change the split later?
What is a "good leaver" vs "bad leaver"?
Should one founder be majority owner?
What if we cannot agree?
Build the foundation.
Entity, EIN, banking, cap table, contracts, books. Everything funders, lenders, and acquirers want to see.
This guide is educational. Funding decisions require professional advice from licensed attorneys and CPAs.
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