BIM45085 - Specific deductions: entertainment: sales promotion schemes
Timeshare and ‘scratch cards’
Gifts may be offered to customers as part of a sales promotion
scheme. These are not business entertainment if there is a genuine
obligation upon the customer to provide something substantive in
return.
For instance, a trader may offer gifts as an incentive to
customers to attend a demonstration of their products. This is
particularly common in the timeshare industry, where cash or other
gifts are offered to customers on condition that they supply
certain personal details and sit through a sales presentation. Here
there are obligations on both sides. The trader is obliged to
provide the ‘gift’ once the conditions have been met
and the customer is obliged to make a commitment in terms of time
and personal information. So long as the reward is not excessive in
terms of the task performed, you should not treat it as
disallowable business entertainment.
Another form of sales promotion is the issuing of ‘no
purchase necessary’ scratch cards or similar items. The card
itself may be regarded as a business gift, as the customer does not
provide anything in return. However, the value of each individual
card relates only to the probability of its being a winner - in
most cases this brings it within the exemption for small gifts.
(For further information on competition prizes see
BIM45075.)
