πŸ“ The Not so 'Trivial' Tax Free Benefit πŸ“

A little known and underused tax free perk is the trivial benefits exemption.

A benefit provided to an employee is classed as a trivial benefit and therefore tax free for not only them, but a tax deduction for the employer too, provided that;

βœ”οΈ It is less than Β£50, if given as a voucher it is non-cash transferable,
βœ”οΈ It is NOT a reward for services,
βœ”οΈ And, it isn't included in the terms of an employee’s contract.

Examples πŸ‘€

Trivial benefits could include, a gift voucher, a bunch of flowers, taking a group of employees out for a meal to celebrate a birthday (as long as it doesn’t exceed Β£50 incl VAT per head).

To avoid the reward for service rule, the benefits could be given for a birthday, or a turkey or bottle of wine at Christmas, the birth of a child or a bereavement.

There is no limit to employees! 😲

HMRC’s legislation does not state how many times per year you can give a trivial benefit to your employees. But be wise! Obviously a Β£50 gift every working day of the year would ring HMRC's alarm bells so we would advise that any trivial benefits made in the year are made as a gesture rather than a frequent payment.

An does this apply to company directors too? πŸ‘€

Yes it does! To limit company directors taking advantage of this tax freebie, HMRC will allow trivial benefits provided to directors up to a value of Β£300 per year. So that’s a payment up to Β£50 once every two months. If your spouse is also a director that is another saving of Β£300 from your tax bills. πŸ’°

You’ll need to declare and pay Tax & NI on anything above e.g. Β£51 will mean the full amount not deductible and is reportable through P11D/PSA or payroll as benefits.

#recruitmentbusiness #recruiters #recruitmentdirectors #taxfreeperks #recruitmentaccountants #trivialbenefits #taxsavings #hasslefreeaccountancy

Please note, all our content is for general guideline only, every case is different and we would recommend speaking to us before taking any action as a result of the content. The content was correct at the time it was published.

Brian & CarolineComment