As the festive season approaches, many small businesses start planning staff celebrations and gifts to say thank you for a year of hard work.

How much of your festive generosity is tax-deductible and what do you need to watch out for with HMRC rules?

Here’s a simple guide to what is allowed, what’s not and how to keep your celebrations tax-efficient and compliant.

🍽️ 1. The Staff Christmas Party — HMRC’s Annual Event Exemption

HMRC allows you to provide an annual event such as a Christmas party or summer gathering without it being treated as a taxable benefit for your employees.

To qualify for this tax exemption, your event must meet three key conditions:

It’s an annual event (like a Christmas or summer party).
It’s open to all employees (not just directors or selected staff).
The total cost is £150 or less per head (including VAT, food, drink, entertainment and any transport or accommodation).

If all three are met:

  • The cost is tax-deductible for your business.
  • There’s no benefit-in-kind charge for staff.
  • You can reclaim VAT (if applicable).

If you go over £150 per head, even by £1, the entire amount becomes taxable, not just the excess.

💡 Tip: The £150 limit applies to the total of all annual events (e.g., if you host both a summer and Christmas party). You can split the allowance between them.

🎁 2. Staff Gifts — The Trivial Benefits Rule

Small staff gifts can also be given tax-free under HMRC’s “trivial benefits” exemption, provided they meet specific criteria.

To qualify, each gift must:

  • Cost £50 or less per person (including VAT)
  • Not be cash or a cash voucher (gift cards for stores or experiences are fine)
  • Not be a reward for work or part of an employee’s contract
  • Not be part of a salary sacrifice arrangement

Examples that qualify:

  • A supermarket or Amazon voucher worth £30
  • A bottle of wine, box of chocolates or festive hamper
  • A birthday or Christmas gift

Directors of close companies (usually small limited companies) have an annual cap of £300 total per tax year under this rule.

🧾 3. What You Can’t Claim

Some common festive expenses are not tax-deductible, including:

  • Client entertaining (meals, drinks, or gifts for customers)
  • Cash bonuses or performance rewards (treated as salary)
  • Non-qualifying staff events or gifts over the HMRC thresholds

These may still be great for morale or client relationships but remember, they won’t reduce your tax bill.

💰 4. VAT and Record-Keeping

If your business is VAT-registered, you can usually reclaim VAT on staff entertaining costs but not for partners or family members attending the same event.

Keep clear records of:

  • Guest lists (to confirm it was a staff event)
  • Invoices and receipts
  • Cost breakdowns (including VAT)

These details can make all the difference if HMRC ever reviews your accounts.

Please also see: https://www.gov.uk/expenses-benefits-social-functions-parties

💎 How An Accounting Gem Can Help

At An Accounting Gem, we help small businesses enjoy the festive season without stressing over tax rules.

We’ll guide you on:

  • Which costs are fully deductible
  • How to stay within HMRC limits
  • Smart ways to give staff gifts or rewards tax-efficiently
  • Accurate bookkeeping to support your claims

Enjoy celebrating your team’s success, we’ll take care of the numbers behind it.

📞 Get in touch to review your year-end expenses and make sure you’re claiming everything you’re entitled to.

Please see another An Accounting Gem blog: https://www.aag-accountants.co.uk/sole-trader-or-limited-company-choosing-the-best-structure-for-your-business/