EIM31980 - Travel expenses: general: overseas conferences, seminars and study tours: spouses on business trips
Sections 336 to 339 ITEPA 2003
Some employers regard it as being in their interests to
encourage a director or employee to be accompanied by his or her
spouse on business trips, particularly those abroad. Employers who
operate such a policy will usually pay or reimburse the spouse's
expenses. Those expenses will be assessable on the employee as
general earnings, except for employees in an excluded employment
(see
EIM20007). The employee will then need
to consider a deduction under Sections 336 to 339 ITEPA 2003.
Whether or not a deduction is due will depend on the facts.
It is vital that these are established, preferably by a meeting
with the couple, before a decision is reached.
To obtain a deduction the employee must show that the expense
of taking his or her spouse was necessarily incurred in the
performance of the employee's duties. It is legitimate to ask
whether the duties would have required someone else to accompany
the employee, for example a secretary or interpreter, if the
employee's spouse had not accompanied the employee, or the employee
had not been married. A deduction should normally only be permitted
in the circumstances set out in
EIM31985.
In the case of Maclean v Trembath (36TC653) the Courts
refused a deduction for the cost of a wife's trip to Australia
where there was no evidence to support a deduction.
Example
EIM31992 shows how to determine which
expenses should be disallowed when a spouse accompanies the
employee on an overseas business trip.
