Firstly, you must consider if the individual incurring the costs are employed by the UK entity.
If they are not a UK employee – the expense is classed as business entertainment.
Business entertaining
- Basically not allowable expense in any shape or form by HMRC.
- Not a deductible expense for corporate income tax
- Not a deductible expense for VAT
- Overseas employees who come to visit – if they are not employees or Directors of the UK company so this is not an allowable deduction by the UK company.
- If you entertain someone who is not an employee who is from overseas, you may recover a portion of the VAT.
- Even though it is not allowable as a cost, it should be noted that it is better that it goes through the business, rather than paid personally, where you would have suffered income tax to earn the money to pay for it. You may not get a business deduction, but it is allowable the business pays for it and it is not considered income or a benefit provided it is “reasonable”.
- Be mindful of the bribery act, and your duty to not spend too much on entertainment and it deemed a bribe.
Travel and subsistence
Allowable expense for an employee while they are performing the duties of their employment.
E.G. if you send an employee to work at a client’s premises for the day and they have to stay overnight because of the distance.
There is no formal limit on the costs, it just has to be “reasonable”, so you can set your own policy in terms of what kind of accommodation employees may use on business trips. but your policy should be consistent across all staff.
This category of expense is fully tax deductible and the VAT is recoverable.
It is not a taxable benefit for the employee in question unless you provide a per diem cost in excess of HMRC’s overnight allowance.
If an employee entertained a client, this would also be a tax free expense for the employee however, the cost of the client entertaining would be added back for corporation tax purposes as a disallowable expense.
HMRC publish benchmark scale rates that they will accept as being allowable costs. https://www.gov.uk/hmrc-internal-manuals/employment-income-manual/eim05231