BIM45080 - Specific deductions: entertainment: sales incentive schemes
Performance related rewards are not business gifts
Awards made under a sales incentive scheme that are a way of
rewarding performance are not business gifts.
Typically, a scheme of this kind has a structure of awards
available to sales staff (who may or may not be employees). Awards
may be dependent upon a particular level of sales or alternatively
there might be a ‘prize’ for the highest number of
sales. These prizes are not normally in cash, but may be holidays,
luxury items or attendance at sales ‘conventions’ at
which little work is done.
Expenditure satisfying all of the following conditions is
allowable:
- the reward has been genuinely ‘earned’ by the recipient, and
- there is an obligation upon the trader to provide the gift, and
- the gift is provided as part of a genuine business scheme.
As far as the first condition is concerned, it is necessary to
show that there is a direct relationship between the task and the
reward - that there is a fair commercial exchange. Performance must
be a genuine requirement and not merely a pretext for the award.
Schemes that ensure ‘every one is a winner’ are
unlikely to be genuine.
The last two conditions are normally fulfilled where there is
a formal scheme in place and the rules are made known to all
eligible persons.
For information about the tax position of the recipients of
sales incentive awards see
BIM45090.
