Atlantic Umbrella

A leading UK website for contractors and freelancers | Updated:Fri, 09 Jan 2009, 00:01 GMT

Contractor doctor: can expenses be claimed for entertainment?

This response was written by David Colom of Platinum Umbrella the executive management and payroll umbrella service for premium contractors.

Dear Contractor Doctor,

I am taking one of my clients out for lunch next week. Can it be claimed as an entertainment expense?

Thanks

[Name supplied]

Contractor Doctor says:

You can claim for entertainment, but it is not tax deductible and not worth putting through the company.

Expenditure on entertaining is not allowable for corporation tax relief and no VAT input claims can be made.

Company directors are usually more minded to the commercial reality of entertaining a customer or potential customer rather than the tax disallowance on the cost

David Colom - PlatinumUmbrella.com

Company directors are usually more minded to the commercial reality of entertaining a customer or potential customer, rather than the tax disallowance on the cost.

Expenditure rules:

Expenditure on business entertaining, including hospitality of any kind and on gifts, is not allowable, except for:

  1. Gifts (other than food, drink, tobacco, tokens or vouchers) bearing a conspicuous promotional advert and costing less than £50 per person per annum, or;
  2. Expenditure on staff functions, e.g. Christmas party are allowable of up to £150 per person per annum

Declaration on form P11D:

Any expenses reimbursed to an employee by their employer must be declared on form P11D, together with an appropriate claim for business use.

Is it worth putting through the company?

In the context of a one man consultancy company, there is likely to be very little entertaining.

If you need to pay for entertaining, it is not worth putting the costs through your company, since it will be disallowed in the corporation tax computation and be subject for form P11D compliance and disclosure.

The expense is more efficiently dealt with by paying out of taxed income to avoid the administration implications, which produce no benefit for the company or employee.

Contractor Doctor


Published: Monday, December 12, 2005

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