Here's a repeat from this time last year...
You may well be planning a Christmas party for your staff - in fact, around here it seems that if you've not booked it already you might struggle to get in! So, we thought we'd summarise the tax rules around Christmas parties and gifts for you.
If an employer provides a Christmas party that's available to all of its staff (note that this really applies to PAYE employees, as opposed to, say, freelancers), where the cost is less than £150 per head, then it can reclaim all of the VAT and deduct the entire remaining cost from its profits before working out its tax bill - effectively, if a normal VAT-registered limited company holds its party at a normal VAT-registered venue, every £100 spent on the party ends up costing the company £67. Actually, those allowances apply to annual events, not specifically Christmas ones - so you could have, say, a summer barbecue *and* a Christmas party costing less than £150 a head in total and still reclaim all of the VAT and get tax relief on the balance.
If your company has only one employee, you, then that's cool - you can still take advantage of the concession and go out for a nice meal with a partner, and save VAT and corporation tax as long as you stay within that £150 per head allowance.
If you want to give a Christmas gift to staff, then in practice HMRC consider a relatively small item like a turkey or a fairly normal bottle of wine to be trivial, and won't try to tax the employee on the value of the gift. Assuming there's VAT on the gift when you buy it, then once more the ultimate cost of £100 of staff gifts to a normal VAT-registered limited company employer will be £67. Anything more valuable the employees will have to pay tax on - and you'll have to pay National Insurance too.
If you give gifts to customers, then they'll only save you tax if:
- The total value of gifts in a year to the customer is less than £50,
- The gift has a clear advert for your business on it, and
- You can't eat, drink or smoke it!
If you want to give a customer a bottle of whisky then that's still completely fine, and may well make great business sense! It's just that for every £100 you spend on gifts like that, it costs your business the full £100 - you can't reclaim any VAT or reduce your corporation tax or income tax bill at all.
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