BIM45020 - Specific deductions: entertainment: expenditure which is not allowable
Expenditure that is incidental is not allowable
Expenditure on business entertainment is not allowable as a
deduction against profits. Nor may a deduction be made for any
expenditure which is incidental to business entertainment -
ICTA88/S577 (7).
The meaning of ‘incidental’ is not defined but
you should interpret it to mean any expenditure that is incurred
directly or indirectly in connection with the provision of
entertainment. This might include payments to a third party for the
organisation of entertainment or the costs of issuing invitations
to customers. It will also include the cost of maintaining assets,
such as yachts, which are used for business entertainment purposes.
Guidance on travelling costs is given at
BIM45025.
It is only the net expenditure incurred which is not
allowable. So any charge which is made to the recipients of the
entertainment is taken into account when calculating the amount
which is not allowed - see the example in
BIM45012.
Traders may obtain entertainment through barter arrangements
in which their own goods or services are exchanged for hospitality.
The amount to be disallowed is the larger of:
- the value at which the transaction is recognised in the profit and loss account, and
- the cost of the goods or services exchanged for business entertainment.
