Gifting at Christmas? Here are the tax rules you need to know
Christmas is on its way, and for business owners this may also mean the time for making gifts to your staff and to your contacts, or providing some entertainment.
However, before you get carried away with the season of good cheer, it’s a good idea to familiarise yourself with what does or does not incur any tax.
If you are overly generous, you may need to pay tax and National Insurance. Worse, if you fail to declare taxable gifts, then you could also face penalties. Merry Christmas from HMRC!
If you are holding an office party this year, you may be laying on some kind of paid for entertainment.
The maximum you can spend per employee is £150 and this is the allowance for the whole year, not just Christmas, so do take into account what you have spent so far.
There are also tax rules around giving and receiving gifts, which apply all year and not just at Christmas.
- Cash bonuses: any cash you give to employees as a Christmas bonus counts as earnings, so you’ll need to add the value to your employees’ other earnings and take off tax and National Insurance through payroll.
- Goods: it is only free to give a gift to an employee, client, or supplier if the gift is ‘trivial’ in HMRC’s eyes. If the items can’t be counted as trivial benefits, you must report them on form P11D and pay National Insurance on the value of the benefit.
For you, the donor, the gift is non-tax deductible. There are also complex rules governing gifts to a third party, such as making gifts to a supplier’s employees. If you are not sure of the rules, do seek advice before going ahead.
The rules are slightly different if you are self-employed. Here, you don’t have to report or pay tax or National Insurance on personal gifts (such as Christmas presents).