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A nonprofit membership organization providing unbiased information and research on broad-based employee stock plans

Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) Facts

ESOP map
ESOP Map of the U.S.

As of 2024, we at the National Center for Employee Ownership (NCEO) estimate there are roughly 6,500 employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) at 6,322 companies, covering 14.7 million participants and holding over $2.1 trillion in assets. Since the beginning of the 21st century there has been a decline in the number of plans but an increase in the number of participants. There also are almost 5,000 profit sharing and (to a much lesser extent) stock bonus plans that are substantially invested in company stock and are like ESOPs in other ways, covering over 776,000 participants.

A Statistical Snapshot of ESOPs infographic
See our infographic on ESOP statistics

In addition, researchers at Rutgers University estimated in April 2024 (PDF) that as of 2021 data (the most current), 11 million employees participate in equity compensation plans such as restricted stock, stock options, and employee stock purchase plans (ESPPs); in addition, approximately 10,000 workers are employed in worker cooperatives, while others are beneficiaries of employee ownership trusts (EOTs). Adding the 14.7 million ESOP participants to all these employees, approximately 18% of U.S. employees have an ownership stake in their employer.

Major Uses of ESOPs

An Interactive Introduction to ESOPs
Take our Interactive Introduction to ESOPs

About two-thirds of ESOPs are used to provide a market for the shares of a departing owner of a profitable, closely held company. Most of the remainder are used either as a supplemental employee benefit plan or as a means to borrow money in a tax-favored manner. Less than 10% of plans are in public companies. In contrast, stock option or other equity compensation plans are used primarily in public firms as an employee benefit and in rapidly growing private companies.

Latest Data Shows Uptick in Private Company Participants

As of 2024, the most recent research files released by the Department of Labor with refined data are for 2021 and show a 22% increase in the count of closely held company ESOP participants, reaching 2.35 million. (Almost all ESOP companies are closely held, although public companies have the most participants due to their size.)

ESOP Breakdown by Industry

ESOPs by Industry Sector 2024
See our ESOP Breakdowns by Industry

ESOPs are used across a broad representation of industries, from architects to supermarkets to manufacturers. The most popular sector groups for private companies are professional, scientific, and technical services; manufacturing; and construction. For public companies, they are manufacturing, finance and insurance, and utilities. See our ESOP Breakdowns by Industry infographics.

Employee Ownership and Corporate Performance

A 2000 Rutgers study found that ESOP companies grow 2.3% to 2.4% faster after setting up their ESOP than would have been expected without it. Companies that combine employee ownership with employee workplace participation programs show even more substantial gains in performance. A 1986 NCEO study found that employee ownership firms that practice participative management grow 8% to 11% per year faster with their ownership plans than they would have without them. Note, however, that participation plans alone have little impact on company performance. These NCEO data have been confirmed by several subsequent academic studies that find both the same direction and magnitude of results.

How ESOPs Work

How an ESOP Works infographic
See our infographic on how an ESOP works

Companies set up a trust fund for employees and contribute either cash to buy company stock, contribute shares directly to the plan, or have the plan borrow money to buy shares. If the plan borrows money, the company makes contributions to the plan to enable it to repay the loan. Contributions to the plan are tax-deductible. Employees pay no tax on the contributions until they receive the stock when they leave or retire. They then either sell it on the market or back to the company. Provided that an ESOP owns 30% or more of company stock and the company is a C corporation, owners of a private firm selling to an ESOP can defer taxation on their gains by reinvesting in securities of other companies. S corporations can have ESOPs as well. Earnings attributable to the ESOP's ownership share in S corporations are not taxable. See our FAQs on ESOPs and Employee Ownership and ESOP Pros and Cons.

An Interactive Introduction to ESOPs
Take our Interactive Introduction to ESOPs

In other plans, approximately 800 employers partially match employee 401(k) contributions with contributions of employer stock. Employees can also choose to invest in employer stock. In stock option and other individual equity plans, companies give employees the right to purchase shares at a fixed price for a set number of years into the future. (Do not confuse stock options with U.S. ESOPs; in India, for example, employee stock option plans are called "ESOPs," but the U.S. ESOP has nothing to do with stock options.)

How Employees Benefit

Participants in ESOPs do well. A 1997 Washington State study found that ESOP participants made 5% to 12% more in wages and had almost three times the retirement assets as did workers in comparable non-ESOP companies.

According to a 2010 NCEO analysis of ESOP company government filings in 2008, the average ESOP participant receives about $4,443 per year in company contributions to the ESOP and has an account balance of $55,836. People in the plan for many years would have much larger balances. In addition, 56% of the ESOP companies have at least one additional employee retirement plan. By contrast, only about 44% of all companies otherwise comparable to ESOPs have any retirement plan, and many of these are funded entirely by employees.

Examples of Major ESOP Companies

Employee Ownership 100

ESOPs can be found in all kinds of sizes of companies. Some of the more notable majority employee-owned companies are Publix Super Markets (230,000 employees), Houchens Industries (18,000 employees), W.L. Gore and Associates (maker of Gore-Tex, 12,000 employees), and Davey Tree Expert (11,350 employees) (see our Employee Ownership 100 list). Companies with ESOPs and other broad-based employee ownership plans account for well over half of Fortune Magazine's "100 Best Companies to Work for in America" list year after year.

For Further Reading at NCEO.org

Below are a few good starting points at our main website; see our Find Your Resource page to explore further, especially the "Start Here" pages:

An ESOP Map of the United States

Our interactive map of U.S. ESOPs color-coded by industry sector, updated for 2024, displays information about every U.S. ESOP on record.

ESOP map

Which States Have More ESOP Companies? See Our Heatmap

Our interactive heatmap of U.S. ESOPs in private companies shows how many plans are in your state and how many participants they have.

ESOP heatmap