The Delaware Supreme Court’s December 19, 2025 ruling created an immediate problem for Tesla: Musk couldn’t keep both packages. The company’s “no double dip” contractual language required revoking the $29 billion interim award once his original $56 billion package was restored.
Tesla’s board voted April 21st to pull the interim compensation, with Musk and his brother Kimbal abstaining to avoid any appearance of self-dealing. This wasn’t corporate generosity gone wrong—it was Delaware’s highest court rejecting what it called an “extreme remedy.”
The lower court’s complete cancellation of Musk’s 2018 package left him uncompensated for six years of CEO work, something the Supreme Court found inappropriate. The justices focused narrowly on remedy rather than whether the original package was fair, awarding only $1 in nominal damages.
The Real Prize Remains Intact
Here’s what the headlines missed: Musk’s $1 trillion compensation package, approved by shareholders in November 2025, remains completely untouched. That astronomical sum requires hitting massive operational milestones over the next decade:
- Delivering 20 million vehicles
- Producing one million robots
- Deploying one million robotaxis
- Boosting Tesla’s valuation beyond $8 trillion
Tesla’s own SEC filings reveal internal skepticism about these targets. The company marked $9.97 billion in compensation as “probable of achievement” but classified between $105.82 billion and $120.37 billion as “not probable”—suggesting Tesla itself doubts Musk can hit several major milestones.
Precedent With Lasting Impact
This case establishes crucial precedent for corporate governance battles. Complete rescission of executive compensation packages just became much harder to achieve in Delaware courts. Future shareholder lawsuits will need alternative remedies beyond total cancellation—maybe clawbacks, reduced awards, or enhanced oversight requirements.
The ruling also reinforces executive leverage in talent wars, particularly around AI development where Musk had threatened to leave Tesla entirely. For corporate boards designing executive packages, the message is clear: document your process meticulously, but don’t expect courts to easily unwind completed work arrangements.





























