Employee Christmas Parties and Gifts – Any FBT?
The Christmas break-up party and/or gifts to employees can be exempt from Fringe Benefits if a few rules are followed.
Whilst changes occurred during 2010 to vehicle benefits and Living Away from Home benefits, these changes do not effect the typical benefits provided at Christmas. The rules which are consistent with 2011 are briefly:-
The cost can be exempt as an exempt property benefit or an exempt minor benefit.
Exempt Property Benefits
- Costs like food and drinks for employees as part of a Christmas party, provided on a working day on business premises and consumed by current employees of that business.
Exempt Minor Benefits
Rule can apply when the property benefits exemption doesn’t apply, because the party is held at a restaurant or separate venue.
- Cost per employee must be less than $300 (GST inclusive)
- Associates of employees such as spouses and children are regarded as employees (hence the limit for an employee and partner would be $300 each)
Gifts are also considered separately from the Christmas party, so provided the cost of a gift and the party are each less than $300, then both would be exempt from FBT.
The minor benefits threshold of less than $300 applies to each benefit provided, not to the total value of all associated benefits.
Hot Issues
- ATO hit list 2025 – Key Areas Under Review
- Why Succession Planning Matters for Privately Owned and Wealth Groups in Australia
- Benefits of a business plan
- Roles and Responsibilities in a Business Partnership
- Mixing business and pleasure? Be vigilant this tax season
- 30 June 2025 - Tax Checklist - Small (and Micro) Business
- 3 more GST fraudsters sentenced under ATO’s Operation Protego
- Evolution of Boeing - 1916 - 2025
- ATO - Targeted Areas of Focus 2024-25
- 6 ways to improve your business plan
- Benchmarks for small business
- Beware the early lodgment tax trap, CPA Australia warns
- Tax lawyer flags compliance traps with family trusts
- Superannuation on paid parental leave from 1 July 2025
- Tax Time Checklists Individuals; Company; Trust; Partnership; and Super Funds
- Comparison of various Animal Weights
- 2025 Tax Planning Guide Part 2
- From 1 July 2025 ATO Interest is no longer tax deductible
- SME confidence and conditions see uptick over Q1 2025, survey reveals
- Depreciation expert urges property investors to leverage tax depreciation
- Buy a business
- Upskilling and self-education costs
- How secure is your super account?
- Freshwater Resources by Country 2025
- Why Might a Lease Dispute Occur?
- 2025 Tax Planning Guide Part 1
- $20,000 instant asset write-off
- New Bunnings scam warning
- The Largest Empires in the World's History