Following the Money: A Look at Nextdoor CEO Compensation

After not receiving the SEC disclosure information directly from Nextdoor Investor Relations despite my request, I decided to obtain the publicly available filings myself.

I reviewed the SEC disclosures and created the attached spreadsheet to better understand CEO Nirav Tolia's compensation in 2024 and 2025.

Here are a few observations:

Base Salary

2024: $334,615 (prorated due to his May 8, 2024, start date as CEO; annualized salary of $500,000)

2025: $500,000

Earned Bonus

2024: $500,000

2025: $543,367

According to the SEC disclosures, the 2024 annual incentive was weighted 50% toward achieving $235 million in revenue and 50% toward an adjusted EBITDA loss target of less than $57 million. The filings describe how these performance measures factored into the annual incentive award.

Stock & Option Awards

2024: $20,183,196 (new-hire equity grants)

2025: $2,216,555

Other Compensation

2024: $59,008

2025: $2,300

This resulted in reported total compensation of approximately:

2024: $21.08 million

2025: $3.26 million

As a shareholder, I'm not criticizing executive compensation simply because it's executive compensation.

It's about understanding how compensation aligns with company performance and shareholder outcomes.

Executive incentive plans are designed to reward specific objectives. The important questions are:

Were the performance metrics the right ones?

Did they drive long-term shareholder value?

How should investors evaluate bonuses when some company performance indicators remain challenged?

Do the incentives encourage sustainable growth, profitability, and accountability?

These are governance questions every public company investor should ask—not just about Nextdoor, but about any company they own.

That's why I continue reading the SEC filings myself. They're often one of the best ways to understand how a board evaluates leadership performance.

I'd be interested to hear how other investors evaluate executive compensation packages. What metrics do you believe matter most?

Join the discussion on NielFlamm.com.

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