AAON (AAON) proxy: Backlog surges to $1.83B; board, auditor votes set
AAON, Inc. is soliciting proxies for its 2026 Annual Meeting to be held on May 12, 2026, where stockholders will vote on director elections, ratification of Grant Thornton LLP as auditor, advisory votes on executive compensation and frequency, and an amendment to increase the Board’s maximum size.
Financial highlights disclosed for the year ended December 31, 2025 include a backlog of $1,828.5 million (an increase of 110.9% versus December 31, 2024), net sales of $1,442.1 million (up 20.1%), capital expenditures of $204.9 million, and $30.0 million of share repurchases (approximately 0.4 million shares at an average price of $80.81). The record date shows 81,589,231 shares outstanding as of March 13, 2026.
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Insights
Proxy seeks approval for director slate, auditor ratification, compensation votes, and Board-size increase.
The proxy schedules the May 12, 2026 Annual Meeting with five numbered proposals including election of three Class II directors and a proposal to amend the Articles to increase Board size. Voting standards are stated: director election by majority of votes cast and the Board recommends FOR each director and auditor ratification.
Shareholder action on Proposal No. 5 requires an affirmative vote of a majority of outstanding shares; abstentions/broker non-votes count as votes against that proposal per the proxy text.
2025 operating snapshot shows substantial order growth and heavy capital investment.
AAON reports backlog of $1,828.5 million, up 110.9%, and net sales of $1,442.1 million (up 20.1) for the year ended December 31, 2025. Capital expenditures, including intangibles, totaled $204.9 million and the company repurchased $30.0 million of shares in 2025.
These figures indicate a heavy near-term investment phase tied to demand (notably for BASX products); subsequent filings and quarterly reports will show whether operating cash flow and margins convert these investments into sustained earning power.
☑ | Preliminary Proxy Statement | |
☐ | Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | |
☐ | Definitive Proxy Statement | |
☐ | Definitive Additional Materials | |
☐ | Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12 |
☑ | No fee required | |
☐ | Fee paid previously with preliminary materials | |
☐ | Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11 | |

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SUMMARY PROXY INFORMATION | 1 |
Proxy Statement Summary | 1 |
Director Nominees | 3 |
Business Highlights | 4 |
Compensation Highlights | 5 |
CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY | 6 |
Environmental Performance | 6 |
Community Investment | 8 |
Human Capital Management | 9 |
Inclusion and Diversity | 9 |
GOVERNANCE OF THE COMPANY | 11 |
Code of Business Conduct and Ethics | 11 |
Director Independence | 11 |
Policy Against Hedging Stock | 12 |
Board Leadership Structure | 12 |
Succession Planning | 13 |
Our Board and Corporate Strategy | 13 |
Stockholder Engagement | 13 |
Risk Oversight | 14 |
Board Committee Structure | 14 |
Audit Committee | 15 |
Compensation Committee | 15 |
Governance Committee | 15 |
Director Nominations | 15 |
Director Compensation | 16 |
Compensation Committee's Interlocks and Insider Participation | 17 |
Executive Sessions | 17 |
Communicating with the Board | 17 |
Whistleblower Procedures | 18 |
PROPOSAL 1 - ELECTION OF DIRECTORS | 19 |
Election by Majority Vote | 19 |
Board Diversity | 20 |
Board Qualifications | 21 |
PROPOSAL 2 - RATIFY THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT AUDITOR | 25 |
Ratification of Selection of Grant Thorton LLP | 25 |
Audit and Non-Audit Fees | 25 |
Audit Committee Policy on Services Provided by the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | 26 |
2025 Report of the Audit Committee | 26 |
STOCK OWNERSHIP | 27 |
Holdings of Major Stockholders | 27 |
Holdings of Officers and Directors | 28 |
Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance | 29 |
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS | 30 |
Executive Officers | 30 |
Executive Summary | 30 |
Compensation Philosophy | 31 |
Benchmarking and Peer Group | 32 |
2025 Executive Compensation Program Elements | 33 |
Base Salaries | 34 |
Annual Cash Incentive Bonuses | 34 |
Equity-Based Compensation | 36 |
Retirement Benefits | 37 |
Other Compensation Program Components | 37 |
Stock Ownership and Retention Policy | 38 |
Prohibition on Hedging or Pledging Stock | 38 |
Clawback Policies | 39 |
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT | 40 |
COMPENSATION OF NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS | 41 |
Summary Compensation Table | 41 |
Grants of Plan-Based Awards | 42 |
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year End | 44 |
Option Exercises | 47 |
CEO Pay Ratio | 47 |
Pay Versus Performance | 48 |
Equity Compensation Plan Information | 52 |
PROPOSAL 3 - ADVISORY VOTE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION | 53 |
Say-on-Pay | 53 |
PROPOSAL 4 - ADVISORY VOTE ON FREQUENCY OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION VOTES | 54 |
PROPOSAL 5 - INCREASE SIZE OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS | 55 |
TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS | 56 |
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2027 ANNUAL MEETING | 57 |
OTHER MATTERS | 58 |
OVERVIEW OF PROPOSALS AND SIGNATURE PAGE | 59 |
ANNEX A - CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT | 60 |
Director | Age | Start | Expires | Occupation | Independent |
Norman H. Asbjornson | 90 | 1988 | 2027 | Retired, Founder of AAON | No |
Gary D. Fields | 66 | 2015 | 2027 | Special Advisor to the Board and former Chief Executive Officer of AAON | No |
Angela E. Kouplen | 52 | 2016 | 2027 | Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer, ONE Gas, Inc. | Yes |
Caron A. Lawhorn | 65 | 2019 | 2026 | Retired, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, ONE Gas, Inc. | Yes |
Stephen O. LeClair | 57 | 2017 | 2026 | Executive Chairman, Core & Main, Inc. | Yes |
A.H. McElroy II | 63 | 2007 | 2028 | President and Chief Executive Officer, McElroy Manufacturing, Inc. | Yes |
David R. Stewart | 70 | 2021 | 2026 | Chief Administrative Officer and Trustee of the Oklahoma Ordnance Works Authority | Yes |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 42 | 2025 | 2028 | Chief Executive Officer, AAON | No |
Bruce Ware | 50 | 2021 | 2028 | Chairman and CEO of One America Bancorp, Inc. | Yes |
Operational Efficiency and Investments | Research and Development Lead to Industry Innovation | Identifying Risks to Business and Industry | Industry Collaboration and Leadership | Commitment to Sustaining Communities and Natural Resources |
AAON recognizes that investments in its facilities, employees, and governance in a clean, safe, and environmentally conscious manner are critical to long-term sustainability. | Our research and development leads the charge in energy efficient innovations to meet increasing decarbonization demands and to help AAON customers meet their sustainability goals. | AAON proactively works with internal and external stakeholders to identify and address risks that could affect our business and industry. This includes disclosing Sustainability performance and practices with third- parties. | AAON emphasizes the importance of shared knowledge, resources, and solutions to industry toward best- practices and collective action from all stakeholders to positively impact the environment. | AAON commits to protecting natural ecosystems through partnerships and investments in sustainability projects surrounding its local locations and worldwide. |






•Institutional Investors | •Sell-Side Analysts | •Proxy Advisory Firms |
•Retail Stockholders | •Pension Funds | •ESG Raters |
Director | Board | Audit Committee | Compensation Committee | Governance Committee |
Angela E. Kouplen | Member | Member | Chair | — |
Caron A. Lawhorn | Vice-Chair | Chair | — | Member |
Stephen O. LeClair | Member | Member | — | Member |
A.H. McElroy II | Chair | — | Member | Chair |
David R. Stewart | Member | Member | — | Member |
Bruce Ware | Member | Member | Member | — |
Number of Meetings in 2025 | 8 | 4 | 15 | 5 |
Member Participation | >75% | >75% | >75% | >75% |
Director | Annual Retainer ($) | Independent Chair / Vice Chair ($) | Chair Fee (1) ($) | Audit ($) | Compensation ($) | Governance ($) | Total ($) |
Norman H. Asbjornson | $68,750 | $— | $— | $— | $— | $— | $68,750 |
Angela E. Kouplen | $68,750 | $— | $16,000 | $10,000 | $— | $— | $94,750 |
Caron A. Lawhorn | $68,750 | $50,000 | $20,000 | $— | $— | $9,000 | $147,750 |
Stephen O. LeClair | $68,750 | $— | $— | $10,000 | $— | $9,000 | $87,750 |
A.H. McElroy II | $68,750 | $83,250 | $16,000 | $— | $9,000 | $— | $177,000 |
David R. Stewart | $68,750 | $— | $— | $10,000 | $— | $9,000 | $87,750 |
Bruce Ware | $68,750 | $— | $— | $10,000 | $9,000 | $— | $87,750 |
Director | Fees Earned or Paid in Cash ($) | Restricted Stock Awards(1) ($) | Stock Options ($) | All Other Comp. ($) | Total ($) | ||
Norman H. Asbjornson | $68,750 | $161,354 | (3) | $— | (3) | $— | $230,104 |
Angela E. Kouplen | $94,750 | $161,354 | (2) | $— | $— | $256,104 | |
Caron A. Lawhorn | $147,750 | $161,929 | (2) | $— | $— | $309,679 | |
Stephen O. LeClair | $87,750 | $161,929 | (2) | $— | $— | $249,679 | |
A.H. McElroy II | $177,000 | $160,801 | (2) | $— | $— | $337,801 | |
David R. Stewart | $87,750 | $161,929 | (2) | $— | $— | $249,679 | |
Bruce Ware | $87,750 | $160,800 | (2) | $— | $— | $248,550 |
(1) | The values reflect grant date fair value of awards ranging from $104.82 to $105.56 per share granted on May 13, 2025. See also, the discussion of assumptions made in valuing these awards in the notes to the Company’s financial statements. |
(2) | As of December 31, 2025, 2,390; 2,766; 2,766; 1,534; 2,766 and 1,534 unvested shares associated with restricted stock awards were outstanding for Ms. Kouplen, Ms. Lawhorn, Mr. LeClair, Mr. McElroy, Mr. Stewart and Mr. Ware, respectively. Non-qualified options have not been granted during his or her term as a Board member. |
(3) | As of December 31, 2025, 2,390 unvested shares associated with restricted stock awards and 647,104 vested and exercisable non-qualified stock options were outstanding for Mr. Asbjornson. |
Skills, Attributes, and Experience | Norman H. Asbjornson | Gary D. Fields | Angela E. Kouplen | Caron A. Lawhorn | Stephen O. LeClair | A.H. McElroy II | Matthew Tobolski | David R. Stewart | Bruce Ware |
Accounting and Financial Expertise | l | l | l | l | l | ||||
Acquisitions and Divestitures | l | l | l | l | l | ||||
Banking | l | l | |||||||
Compliance | l | l | |||||||
Corporate Development | l | l | l | l | l | l | |||
Corporate Governance | l | l | l | l | l | l | |||
Engineering Management | l | l | l | l | |||||
Executive Compensation | l | l | l | l | |||||
Executive Management | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | l |
Financial and Operational Analysis | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | l |
Human Resources | l | l | |||||||
Industry Knowledge | l | l | l | ||||||
Information Technology | l | l | l | ||||||
Operations | l | l | l | l | l | ||||
Operational Technology | l | l | |||||||
Public Accounting | l | l | |||||||
Regulatory Compliance | l | ||||||||
Risk Management and Oversight | l | l | l | l | l | l | |||
Sales Channel | l | l | l | ||||||
Strategic and Financial Planning | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | |
Demographic Background | |||||||||
Board Tenure (years) | 38 | 11 | 10 | 7 | 9 | 19 | 1 | 5 | 5 |
Age (years) | 90 | 66 | 52 | 65 | 57 | 63 | 42 | 70 | 50 |
Gender (male/female) | M | M | F | F | M | M | M | M | M |
Race/Ethnicity | |||||||||
African American or Black | l | ||||||||
Alaskan Native or American Indian | l | ||||||||
Caucasian/White | l | l | l | l | l | l | l | ||









Year Ended December 31, | ||
Fee Type | 2025 | 2024 |
Audit fees (1) | $969,777 | $772,109 |
Audit-related fees | — | — |
Tax fees | — | — |
Total | $969,777 | $772,109 |
(1) | Professional services rendered for the audits of our financial statements and reviews for the related quarterly financial statements and services that are normally provided by the independent accountants in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements, including reviews of documents filed with the SEC. |
Audit Committee of the Board of Directors: |
Caron A. Lawhorn, Chair |
Angela E. Kouplen, Member |
Stephen O. LeClair, Member |
David R. Stewart, Member |
Bruce Ware, Member |
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner | Number of Shares Owned | Percent of Class | |
Norman H. Asbjornson | 13,728,550 | (1) | 16.8% |
2425 South Yukon Ave. | |||
Tulsa, OK 74107 | |||
BlackRock, Inc. | 6,271,197 | (2) | 7.7% |
50 Hudson Yards | |||
New York, NY 10001 | |||
The Vanguard Group | 5,913,195 | (3) | 7.2% |
100 Vanguard Blvd. | |||
Malvern, PA 19355 | |||
Wellington Management Group LLP | 6,839,277 | (4) | 8.4% |
280 Congress Street | |||
Boston, MA 02210 |
(1) | Includes 10,810 shares under AAON's 401(k) plan, 647,104 shares issuable upon exercise of stock options exercisable currently or within 60 days of the Annual Meeting,1,289,290 shares owned by his foundation and 11,006,207 shares held as trustee of trusts. Mr. Asbjornson has sole voting and investment powers with respect to all shares beneficially owned by him. |
(2) | This share ownership information was provided in a Schedule 13G/A filed April 17, 2025, which discloses that BlackRock, Inc. possesses sole voting power of 6,133,051 shares and sole dispositive power of 6,271,197 shares. |
(3) | This share ownership information was provided in a Schedule 13F-HR filed on January 29, 2026, which discloses that The Vanguard Group possesses sole dispositive power of 5,869,967 shares, shared voting power of 58,929 shares, and shared dispositive power of 43,228 shares. |
(4) | This share ownership information was provided in a Schedule 13G/A filed on February 10, 2026, which discloses that Wellington Management Group LLP possesses no sole voting power, shared voting power of 5,693,799 and no sole dispositive power. |
Name of Beneficial Owner | Total Number of AAON Common Stock Shares owned (1) | Shares Issuable Upon Exercise of Stock Options (2) | Percent of Class |
Norman H. Asbjornson | 13,081,446 | 647,104 | 16.83% |
Gary D. Fields | 49,622 | 133,160 | * |
Casey Kidwell | 14,690 | 6,333 | * |
Angela E. Kouplen | 37,869 | — | * |
Caron A. Lawhorn | 17,385 | — | * |
Stephen O. LeClair | 30,276 | — | * |
A. H. McElroy II | 135,067 | — | * |
Matthew Shaub | 2,294 | 4,005 | * |
David R. Stewart | 11,586 | — | * |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 30,367 | 171,403 | * |
Matt Tobolski | 335,291 | 30,174 | * |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 29,520 | 26,018 | * |
Bruce Ware | 8,586 | — | * |
Directors, nominees and Named Executive Officers as a group (13 persons) | 13,783,999 | 992,179 | 18.14% |
(1) | All shares are held beneficially and of record and the owner has sole voting and investment power with respect thereto, except as otherwise noted. |
(2) | Shares issuable upon exercise of stock options exercisable currently or within 60 days of the Annual Meeting. |
* | Less than 1%. |
Name of Beneficial Owner | Stock Held by 401(k) Plan |
Norman H. Asbjornson | 10,810 |
Gary D. Fields | 6,120 |
Casey Kidwell | 2,208 |
Angela E. Kouplen | — |
Caron A. Lawhorn | — |
Stephen O. LeClair | — |
A. H. McElroy II | — |
Matthew Shaub | 665 |
David R. Stewart | 3,000 |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 4,225 |
Matt Tobolski | 2,638 |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 15,246 |
Bruce Ware | — |
Directors, Nominees, and Named Executive Officers as a group (13 persons) | 29,666 |
NEO Name | NEO Title |
Matthew J. Tobolski | Chief Executive Officer(1) |
Gary Fields | Special Advisor to the Board, Former Chief Executive Officer(1) |
Rebecca A. Thompson | Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer |
Stephen E. Wakefield(2) | Executive Vice-President and General Manager, AAON Business Unit |
Casey Kidwell | Chief Administrative Officer |
Matthew Shaub | Executive Vice President and General Manager, BASX Business Unit |
(1)Effective May 13, 2025, Mr. Tobolski, President and Chief Operating Officer, replaced Gary Fields as Chief Executive Officer. | |
(2)Effective January 1, 2026, Mr. Wakefield transitioned out of his NEO role. His title is now AAON Fellow, Principal Engineering Advisor. | |
What We Do | What We Do Not Do | |
Pay for Performance: Our executive compensation plan is aligned with stockholder interests by rewarding for strong financial performance and stock price appreciation. | No Stock Option Re-Pricing: We do not permit re-pricing of equity awards without stockholder approval. | |
Stock Ownership/Retention Requirements: Our directors, executive officers and certain other key employees are subject to robust stock ownership and retention requirements. | No Tax Gross-Ups: We do not provide tax gross-ups. | |
Independent Compensation Consultant: We utilize an independent compensation consultant reporting directly to the Compensation Committee. | No Hedging or Pledging in Company Securities: Our directors, executive officers and other employees are prohibited from engaging in hedging transactions, short sales, pledging or derivative transactions with respect to AAON securities. | |
Limited Perquisites: We provide executive physicals for our NEOs, which aligns with our wellness initiatives and assists in mitigating risk. No other perquisites exist. | No Employment Agreements: AAON does not have employment agreements with our NEOs. | |
Compensation Clawback: Our executive officers are subject to a compensation clawback policy (with a three-year look-back period) that requires reimbursement of any bonus or incentive compensation (as well as the cancellation of unvested, restricted or deferred equity awards) in the event of officer misconduct that was a material factor causing a restatement of the Company’s financial statements. We also maintain a compensation recovery (clawback) policy that complies with Nasdaq requirements. | We do not provide single-trigger for equity treatment upon a change in control. |
Compensation Element | Compensation Objectives |
Base Salary | Attract and retain qualified executives; |
Motivate and reward executives’ performance; | |
Stay competitive in the marketplace; | |
Bonus Compensation | Motivate and compensate executives’ performance; |
Stay competitive in the marketplace; | |
Motivate the achievement of short-term business objectives that contribute to our long-term strategic success; | |
Equity-Based Compensation — Performance share units, restricted stock awards, and stock options | Enhance profitability of AAON and stockholder value by aligning executives with stockholders’ interest; |
Attract and retain qualified executives; | |
Motivate the successful execution of our long-term strategic objectives; | |
Retirement Benefits – 401(k) and Health Savings Account | Attract and retain qualified executives; |
Stay competitive in the marketplace | |
Ameresco, Inc. | Gibraltar Industries, Inc. | The AZEK Company Inc. |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. | Griffon Corporation | The Gorman-Rupp Company |
CECO Environmental Corp. | Insteel Industries, Inc. | Thermon Group Holdings, Inc. |
CSW Industrials, Inc. | Powell Industries, Inc. | Trex Company, Inc. |
Encore Wire Corporation | Quanex Building Products Corporation | Vicor Corporation |
Enerpac Tool Group Corp. | Simpson Manufacturing Co., Inc. |






Named Executive Officer | 2024 Base Salary | 2025 Base Salary | Percent Increase (1) |
Matthew J. Tobolski | $500,000 | $800,000 | 60.0% |
Gary D. Fields | $800,000 | $550,000 | (31.3)% |
Rebecca A. Thompson | $410,000 | $450,000 | 9.8% |
Stephen E. Wakefield | $400,000 | $400,000 | —% |
Casey R. Kidwell | $— | $375,000 | —% |
Matthew J. Shaub | $— | $350,000 | —% |
Named Executive Officer | 2024 Bonus Target | 2025 Bonus Target |
Matthew J. Tobolski(1) | 70% | 105% |
Gary D. Fields(1) | 105% | 80% |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 65% | 70% |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 65% | 65% |
Casey R. Kidwell | —% | 60% |
Matthew J. Shaub | —% | 60% |
(1)Effective May 13, 2025, Mr. Tobolski, President and Chief Operating Officer, replaced Gary Fields as Chief Executive Officer. | ||
Metric | Weighting | Performance Level (% of Target) (1) | Payout Level (% of Target) (1) | ||||
Threshold | Target | Maximum | Threshold | Target | Maximum | ||
Operating Profit | 67% | 80% | 100% | 120% | 33.33% | 100% | 200% |
Net Sales | 33% | 90% | 100% | 110% | 33.33% | 100% | 200% |
(1) | For performance between stated levels shown, payouts are determined based on straight-line, linear interpolation. No payout will be made if threshold performance is not met. |

Named Executive Officer | Base Salary(1) | Eligible % of Base Salary(2) | Bonus Target | Weighted Bonus Factor | Individual Performance Adjustment | Annual Incentive Bonus Amount |
Matthew J. Tobolski | $712,885 | 105% | $748,529 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $218,869 |
Gary D. Fields | $647,115 | 80% | $517,692 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $186,954 |
Rebecca A. Thompson | $442,308 | 70% | $309,616 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $96,107 |
Stephen E. Wakefield | $400,000 | 65% | $260,000 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $81,747 |
Casey R. Kidwell | $365,385 | 60% | $219,231 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $68,929 |
Matthew J. Shaub | $346,769 | 60% | $208,061 | 0.31 | 1.00 | $65,417 |
(1) | Salary is cash compensation for the year and reflects varying pay levels during the year. |
(2) | Eligible targets reflect varying levels during the year based on changes in roles. |
TSR Percentile Ranking | Payout as a % of Target |
80th Percentile or Above | 200% |
55th Percentile | 100% |
30th Percentile | 50% |
Below 30th Percentile | 0% |
Position | Minimum Stock Ownership Requirements |
CEO | 6 times base salary |
President (when separate from CEO) | 4 times base salary |
CFO, COO, EVP, SVP | 3 times base salary |
Other Officers | 2 times base salary |
Directors | 6 times board level cash retainer |
Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors |
Angela E. Kouplen, Chair |
A.H. McElroy II, Member |
Bruce Ware, Member |
Name and Principal Position(2) | Year | Salary ($) | Bonus ($) | Stock Awards(1) ($) | Option Awards(1) ($) | Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation ($) (2) | All Other Compensation (3) ($) | Total ($) |
Matthew J. Tobolski Chief Executive Officer | 2025 | 712,885 | — | 1,916,180 | 764,557 | 218,869 | 43,591 | 3,656,082 |
2024 | 503,548 | — | 579,635 | 162,514 | 203,000 | 48,975 | 1,497,672 | |
Gary D. Fields Special Advisor to the Board | 2025 | 647,115 | — | 514,508 | 207,709 | 186,954 | 51,387 | 1,607,673 |
2024 | 790,385 | — | 2,220,495 | 607,314 | 478,022 | 52,418 | 4,148,634 | |
2023 | 745,192 | — | 2,240,116 | 562,500 | 1,421,143 | 37,834 | 5,006,785 | |
Rebecca A. Thompson Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer | 2025 | 442,308 | — | 353,738 | 142,837 | 96,107 | 45,745 | 1,080,735 |
2024 | 403,269 | — | 457,277 | 125,117 | 152,048 | 42,605 | 1,180,316 | |
2023 | 369,231 | — | 448,053 | 112,496 | 478,504 | 38,887 | 1,447,171 | |
Stephen E. Wakefield Executive Vice-President and General Manager, AAON Business Unit | 2025 | 400,000 | — | 273,438 | 110,359 | 81,747 | 40,500 | 906,044 |
2024 | 398,654 | — | 377,593 | 103,258 | 150,293 | 46,893 | 1,076,691 | |
2023 | 327,115 | — | 313,501 | 78,785 | 409,057 | 41,116 | 1,169,574 | |
Casey R. Kidwell Chief Administrative Officer | 2025 | 365,385 | — | 225,093 | 90,889 | 68,929 | 44,385 | 794,681 |
Matthew J. Shaub Executive Vice-President and General Manager, BASX Business Unit | 2025 | 346,769 | — | 209,114 | 84,342 | 65,417 | 28,988 | 734,630 |
(1) | See discussion of assumptions made in valuing these awards in the notes to our financial statements. The values reflect grant date fair value of awards. Compensation costs are recognized for options, performance share units and restricted stock awards over their requisite service period. |
(2) | All amounts relate to our Annual Cash Incentive Bonus Plan and are accrued at December 31st and paid in March of the following year. See details in the above discussion under Annual Cash Incentive Bonuses. |
(3) | All Other Compensation consists of the following amounts: |
Name | Year | Match under 401(k) Plan (a) | Match to Health Savings Account (HSA) (b) | Life Insurance Premiums (c) | Executive Physicals(d) | Other Bonuses (e) |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 2025 | $36,750 | $5,441 | $1,163 | $— | $237 |
Gary D. Fields | 2025 | $36,225 | $5,425 | $1,428 | $— | $8,309 |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 2025 | $36,750 | $5,441 | $1,428 | $— | $2,126 |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 2025 | $36,750 | $— | $1,428 | $— | $2,322 |
Casey R. Kidwell | 2025 | $36,750 | $5,250 | $1,428 | $— | $957 |
Matthew J. Shaub | 2025 | $23,385 | $4,141 | $1,424 | $— | $38 |
(a) | Represents matching contributions to the Company's 401(k) Plan by AAON. |
(b) | Represents matching contributions by AAON to the employee's Health Savings Account. |
(c) | Represents company-paid life insurance premiums. |
(d) | Represents reimbursement of cost for executive physicals. |
(e) | Represents dividend payments on restricted stock that vested. |
Estimated Future Payouts under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards (2) | Estimated Future Payouts under Equity Incentive Plan Awards | All Other Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock or Units (#) | All Other Option Awards: Number of Securities Underlying Options (#) | Exercise or Base Price of Option Awards ($/sh) | Grant Date Fair Value of Stock/ Option Awards ($) (1) | ||||||
Name | Grant Date | Threshold ($) | Target ($) | Maximum ($) | Threshold (#) | Target (#) | Maximum (#) | ||||
Matthew J. Tobolski | 5/13/25 | 4,562 | 9,124 | 18,248 | 692,512 | ||||||
5/13/25 | 4,311 | 451,898 | |||||||||
5/13/25 | 11,964 | 105.95 | 452,951 | ||||||||
3/11/25 | 3,042 | 6,083 | 12,166 | 461,670 | |||||||
3/11/25 | 3,816 | 310,100 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 10,995 | 82.39 | 311,606 | ||||||||
247,015 | 748,529 | 1,497,059 | |||||||||
Gary D. Fields | 3/11/25 | 2,028 | 4,055 | 8,110 | 307,775 | ||||||
3/11/25 | 2,544 | 206,733 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 7,329 | 82.39 | 207,709 | ||||||||
170,838 | 517,692 | 1,035,384 | |||||||||
Rebecca A Thompson | 3/11/25 | 1,394 | 2,788 | 5,576 | 211,609 | ||||||
3/11/25 | 1,749 | 142,129 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 5,040 | 82.39 | 142,837 | ||||||||
102,173 | 309,616 | 619,231 | |||||||||
Stephen E. Wakefield | 3/11/25 | 1,077 | 2,154 | 4,308 | 163,489 | ||||||
3/11/25 | 1,353 | 109,949 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 3,894 | 82.39 | 110,359 | ||||||||
85,800 | 260,000 | 520,000 | |||||||||
Casey R. Kidwell | 3/11/25 | 887 | 1,774 | 3,548 | 134,647 | ||||||
3/11/25 | 1,113 | 90,446 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 3,207 | 82.39 | 90,889 | ||||||||
72,346 | 219,231 | 438,462 | |||||||||
Matthew J. Shaub | 3/11/25 | 824 | 1,647 | 3,294 | 125,007 | ||||||
3/11/25 | 1,035 | 84,107 | |||||||||
3/11/25 | 2,976 | 82.39 | 84,342 | ||||||||
68,660 | 208,061 | 416,123 | |||||||||
(1) | The grant date fair value of the stock awards is calculated in accordance with ASC Topic 718. |
(2) | Reflects amounts that could be earned pursuant to our annual cash incentive bonus plan. The plan provides that our NEOs may receive annual awards based on the performance of the Company measured by net sales and operating profit and individual performance during the relevant fiscal year. Company targets and individual goals are established annually by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee established annual target awards for each officer expressed as a percentage of their base salaries. The actual amounts earned by the NEOs in 2025 under the plan and paid in 2026 are set forth under the "Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation" column in the Summary Compensation Table for 2025 above. |
Name | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Exercisable | Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Unexercisable | Option Exercise Price ($) | Expiration Date |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 2,405 | 4,810 | 73.87 | 1/1/34 |
— | 10,995 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 | |
— | 11,964 | 105.95 | 5/13/35 | |
Gary D. Fields | 5,253 | — | 31.69 | 5/12/30 |
19,081 | — | 36.13 | 3/15/32 | |
21,312 | 10,656 | 62.04 | 3/6/33 | |
7,446 | 14,892 | 79.73 | 3/11/34 | |
— | 7,329 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 | |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 41,565 | — | 29.48 | 3/11/30 |
8,820 | — | 36.13 | 3/15/32 | |
4,263 | 2,131 | 62.04 | 3/6/33 | |
1,534 | 3,068 | 79.73 | 3/11/34 | |
— | 5,040 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 | |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 12,696 | — | 29.48 | 3/11/30 |
2,646 | — | 36.13 | 3/15/32 | |
1,492 | 1,492 | 62.04 | 3/6/33 | |
1,266 | 2,532 | 79.73 | 3/11/34 | |
— | 3,894 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 | |
Casey Kidwell | 1,554 | — | 36.13 | 3/15/32 |
831 | — | 35.41 | 5/30/32 | |
1,420 | 1,420 | 62.03 | 3/6/33 | |
1,042 | 2,084 | 79.73 | 3/11/34 | |
— | 3,207 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 | |
Matthew Shaub | 343 | 686 | 79.73 | 3/11/34 |
— | 2,976 | 82.39 | 3/11/35 |
Name | Number of Unearned Shares That Have Not Vested (1) | Market Value of Shares of Stock That Have Not Vested ($) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares That Have Not Vested (2) | Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market Value of Shares of Stock That Have Not Vested ($) |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 9,611 | 732,839 | 19,134 | 1,458,968 |
Gary D. Fields | 10,863 | 828,304 | 39,035 | 2,976,419 |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 3,443 | 262,529 | 9,873 | 752,816 |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 2,674 | 203,893 | 7,504 | 572,180 |
Casey Kidwell | 2,256 | 172,020 | 6,539 | 498,599 |
Matthew Shaub | 1,275 | 97,219 | 2,342 | 178,578 |
(1) | Represents RSAs that have not vested. RSAs vest three years from the date of grant, at which time the grantee is entitled to receive one share of our common stock for each vested RSA, plus accrued dividends. RSAs accrue dividends from the date of grant through the vesting date. RSAs granted to Gary D. Fields in his capacity of a Director vest over his remaining term as a Director. RSAs are scheduled to vest as set forth in the table below. |
(2) | Represents PSUs that have not vested. PSUs vest three years from the date of grant, at which time the holder is entitled to receive a percentage (0 to 200 percent) of the PSUs granted based on our TSR over the three-year performance period, compared with the TSR of the peer group. One share of our common stock is payable in respect of each PSU granted that becomes vested. The number of PSUs represented and their corresponding market value is based on 31% achievement at December 31, 2025, for awards vesting in 2026; target payout of 100.0% for awards vesting in 2026, 2027 and 2028. PSUs are scheduled to vest as set forth in the table below. |
Restricted Stock Vesting Schedule: | ||
Name | # of Shares | Vesting Date |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 742 | on January 1, 2026 |
1,272 | on March 11, 2026 | |
1,437 | on May 13, 2026 | |
742 | on January 1, 2027 | |
1,272 | on March 11, 2027 | |
1,437 | on May 13, 2027 | |
1,272 | on March 11, 2028 | |
1,437 | on May 13, 2028 | |
Gary D. Fields | 3,111 | on March 6, 2026 |
3,452 | on March 11, 2026 | |
3,452 | on March 11, 2027 | |
848 | on March 11, 2028 | |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 622 | on March 6, 2026 |
1,119 | on March 11, 2026 | |
1,119 | on March 11, 2027 | |
583 | on March 11, 2028 | |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 435 | on March 6, 2026 |
894 | on March 11, 2026 | |
894 | on March 11, 2027 | |
451 | on March 11, 2028 | |
Casey Kidwell | 415 | on March 6, 2026 |
735 | on March 11, 2026 | |
735 | on March 11, 2027 | |
371 | on March 11, 2028 | |
Matthew Shaub | 465 | on March 11, 2026 |
465 | on March 11, 2027 | |
345 | on March 11, 2028 | |
Name | # of Shares | Vesting Date |
Matthew J. Tobolski | 3,927 | on March 15, 2027 |
15,207 | on March 15, 2028 | |
Gary D. Fields | 19,876 | on March 15, 2026 |
15,104 | on March 15, 2027 | |
4,055 | on March 15, 2028 | |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 3,974 | on March 15, 2026 |
3,111 | on March 15, 2027 | |
2,788 | on March 15, 2028 | |
Stephen E. Wakefield | 2,782 | on March 15, 2026 |
2,568 | on March 15, 2027 | |
2,154 | on March 15, 2028 | |
Casey Kidwell | 2,650 | on March 15, 2026 |
2,115 | on March 15, 2027 | |
1,774 | on March 15, 2028 | |
Matthew Shaub | 695 | on March 15, 2027 |
1,647 | on March 15, 2028 |
Name | Option Awards | Stock Awards | ||
Number of Shares Exercised (#) | Valued Realized on Exercise ($) | Number of Shares Acquired on Vesting (#) | Valued Realized on Vesting ($) | |
Matthew J. Tobolski | — | — | 742 | 87,319 |
Gary D. Fields | 43,211 | 3,006,987 | 10,907 | 902,614 |
Rebecca A. Thompson | 9,350 | 527,880 | 2,531 | 207,617 |
Stephen E. Wakefield | — | — | 2,463 | 202,248 |
Casey R. Kidwell | — | — | 1,381 | 115,591 |
Matthew J. Shaub | — | — | 120 | 9,887 |
Year | Summary Compens ation Table total for Mr. Tobolski ($) | Summary Compens ation Table total for Mr. Fields ($) | Compens ation actually paid to Mr. Tobolski ($) | Compens ation actually paid to Mr. Fields ($) | Average summary compens ation total for non- PEO NEOs ($) | Average compens ation actually paid to non-PEO NEOs ($) | Value of initial fixed $100 investment based on: | Net Income ($000s) | Net Sales ($000s) | |
Total sharehold er return ($) | S&P 600 Capital Goods Industry Group TSR ($) | |||||||||
2025 | ( | |||||||||
2024 | — | — | ||||||||
2023 | — | — | ||||||||
2022 | — | — | ||||||||
2021 | — | — | ||||||||
Year | PEO | Non-PEO NEOs | ||||||
2025 | & | Rebecca A. Thompson, Casey R. Kidwell, Stephen E. Wakefield, Matthew J. Shaub | ||||||
2024 | Rebecca A. Thompson, Matthew J. Tobolski, Stephen E. Wakefield, David E. Benson | |||||||
2023 | Rebecca A. Thompson, Stephen E. Wakefield, Gordon D. Wichman, Robert P. Teis | |||||||
2022 | Rebecca A. Thompson, Stephen E. Wakefield, Larry G. Stewart, Gordon D. Wichman, Casey R. Kidwell | |||||||
2021 | Norman H. Asbjornson, Scott M. Asbjornson, Rebecca A. Thompson, Stephen E. Wakefield, Larry G. Stewart | |||||||
Tobolski | Fields | |||||||
SCT total compen- sation | Deduction from SCT total for equity awards | Additions to SCT total for equity awards | Compen- sation actually paid | SCT total compen- sation | Deduction from SCT total for equity awards | Additions to SCT total for equity awards | Compen- sation actually paid | |
2025 | $ | $( | $ | $ | $ | $( | $( | $( |
2024 | ( | — | — | — | — | |||
2023 | ( | — | — | — | — | |||
2022 | ( | — | — | — | — | |||
2021 | ( | — | — | — | — | |||
Fair value of equity awards reported in SCT for applicable year | Fair value of equity awards granted in applicable year at year end | Change in fair value of unvested equity awards from prior years | Change in fair value of vested equity awards from prior years | Fair value of equity awards forfeited during the covered year | Dividends paid | Total Adjustments | ||
2025 | Tobolski | $( | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ | $ |
2025 | Fields | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
2024 | ( | |||||||
2023 | ( | |||||||
2022 | ( | ( | ( | |||||
2021 | ( |
SCT total compensation | Deduction from SCT total for equity awards | Additions to SCT total for equity awards | Compensation actually paid | |
2025 | $ | $( | $( | $ |
2024 | ( | |||
2023 | ( | |||
2022 | ( | |||
2021 | ( |
Fair value of equity awards reported in SCT for applicable year | Fair value of equity awards granted in applicable year at year end | Change in fair value of unvested equity awards from prior years | Change in fair value of vested equity awards from prior years | Fair value of equity awards forfeited during the covered year | Dividends paid | Total Adjustments | |
2025 | $( | $ | $( | $( | $ | $ | $( |
2024 | ( | ||||||
2023 | ( | ||||||
2022 | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ||
2021 | ( | ( |




Plan Category | Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights | Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights | Number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plan (excluding securities reflected in column (a)) |
Column | (a) | (b) | (c) |
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders (1) | 2,837,113 | 47.21 | 2,264,667 |
Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders (2) | — | — | — |
Total | 2,837,113 | 47.21 | 2,264,667 |
(1) | Consists of shares covered by stock options granted under the 2007 LTIP, as amended, the 2016 Incentive Plan, as amended and the 2024 Incentive Plan. The stock options outstanding as of December 31, 2025, have a weighted-average remaining term of 5.62 years. |
(2) | We do not maintain any equity compensation plans that have not been approved by the stockholders. |
Related Party | Nature of Business Transaction | Amounts* |
Fields Mechanical Systems(1) | Sales and Purchases | Total Sales: $7.7 million Total Purchases: $— million |
Norman H. Asbjornson(2) | Sales and Purchases | Total Sales: $0.1 million Total Purchases: $— million |
Kvichak Lodge(3) | Purchases | Total Purchases: $0.3 million |
N25VR, LLC(4) | Purchases | Total Purchases: $1.1 million |
(1) | The Company sells products to Fields Mechanical Systems, which is owned by the brother of board member Gary Fields. This entity is also one of the Company's independent sales representatives and as such, the Company makes payments to the entity for third-party products, which are reflected in our financial statement as amounts Due to Representatives. The Company had $0.3 million in outstanding receivables from Fields Mechanical Systems at December 31, 2025. |
(2) | The Company sometimes makes sales to Norman Asbjornson and makes payments to Mr. Asbjornson related to a consulting agreement. The Company had no amounts due to Mr. Asbjornson at December 31, 2025. |
(3) | The Company made payments to Kvichak Lodge, a hunting and fishing lodge in Alaska, which is partially owned by Mr. Fields, for various Company meetings. Mr. Fields sold his ownership in the Lodge in 2025. |
(4) | The Company leases flight time of an aircraft partially owned by our current President and CEO Matt Tobolski, and AAON Fellow Dave Benson. |
* | Amounts of "$— million" are less than one hundred thousand dollars. |

The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR All Nominees in Proposal 1: | For | Against | Abstain | The Board of Directors recommends a vote for every 1 YEAR on Proposal 4: | 1 Year | 2 Years | 3 Years | Abstain | |||||||
1. Election of Directors for a term ending in 2029: | 4. Advisory vote to approve the frequency of advisory votes on the Company's executive compensation. | ||||||||||||||
1a. Caron A. Lawhorn | ¨ | ¨ | ¨ | o | o | o | o | ||||||||
1b. Stephen O. LeClair | ¨ | ¨ | ¨ | ||||||||||||
1c. David R. Stewart | ¨ | ¨ | ¨ | ||||||||||||
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR Proposal 2: | For | Against | Abstain | The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR Proposal 5: | For | Against | Abstain | ||||||||
2. Proposal to ratify the selection of Grant Thornton LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2026. | ¨ | ¨ | ¨ | 5. Proposal to amend the Company's Articles of Incorporation to increase the maximum size of the Board from nine to eleven directors. | o | o | o | ||||||||
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR Proposal 3: | For | Against | Abstain | ||||||||||||
3. Proposal to approve, on an advisory basis, a resolution on the compensation of AAON's named executive officers as set forth in the Proxy Statement. | ¨ | ¨ | ¨ | ||||||||||||
Note: Such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof. | |||||||||||||||
Please sign exactly as your name(s) appear(s) hereon. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator, or other fiduciary, please give full title as such. | |||||||||||||||
Joint owners should each sign personally. All holders must sign. | |||||||||||||||
If a corporation or partnership, please sign in full corporate or partnership name, by authorized officer. | |||||||||||||||
Signature [PLEASE SIGN WITHIN BOX] | Date | Signature (Joint Owners) | Date | ||||||||||||
FAQ
What proposals will AAON (AAON) ask shareholders to vote on at the 2026 Annual Meeting?
How large was AAON's backlog at year-end 2025 and how did it change versus 2024?
What were AAON's 2025 net sales and capital expenditures?
Did AAON repurchase shares in 2025 and what was the amount?
How many AAON shares were outstanding as of the record date for the 2026 Annual Meeting?
