BIM45033 - Specific deductions: entertainment: exceptions: entertainment of employees
Staff entertaining is allowable
One of the exceptions to the business entertaining rule concerns
the entertainment of employees. Staff entertaining is allowable, so
long as it is wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the trade
and is not merely incidental to entertainment which is provided for
customers. This exception is contained in ICTA88/S577 (5).
Where an employer provides a staff Christmas party, or a
sporting event which is open only to employees, the expenditure is
not disallowed by Section 577. However, it is still necessary to
establish that the expenditure is wholly and exclusively for the
purpose of the business.
In practice the definition of ‘employees’ is
extended to include retired members of staff and the partners of
existing and past employees. It does not include staff of
associated companies or other companies in the same group, but the
costs incurred by a group parent where employees of subsidiary
companies attend such an event and where the parent makes an
appropriate recharge to the subsidiaries involved are allowable.
Although the expenditure is allowable, the employees
themselves may have to pay tax on the entertainment received and
the employer will have to report this on form P11D. Further
information about the employment income charge to the employee can
be found in EIM21670 (meals) and EIM21690 (parties).
In the past some employers preferred to add back allowable
staff entertaining in the computation of their profits, as an
alternative to reporting benefits on form P11D. You should not
adopt this approach because it is incompatible with SA.
It is possible for a charge to arise on the employee even
where the cost has been disallowed (in whole or in part) to the
employer (for instance, if the scale of the entertaining is
excessive). You should consider ‘excessive’
entertainment provided to employees in the same light as
‘excessive’ remuneration - see
BIM37700 onwards.
