Trivial Benefits: Tax-Free Perks for Employees
The trivial benefits exemption allows employers to give small tax-free gifts and perks to employees without triggering income tax or National Insurance. This guide covers the rules, limits, and how to use the exemption effectively.
What Are Trivial Benefits?
A trivial benefit is a small, non-cash benefit provided by an employer to an employee (or their family) that is exempt from income tax and National Insurance contributions. The exemption was introduced in April 2016 and is set out in the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003.
Under normal rules, most benefits provided to employees are taxable as a benefit in kind and must be reported on a P11D form. The trivial benefits exemption creates a carve-out for small gifts that would be disproportionately burdensome to report.
Qualifying Conditions
For a benefit to qualify as trivial, all four conditions must be met:
| Condition | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Cost | The benefit costs £50 or less (including VAT) |
| Not cash | The benefit is not cash or a cash voucher |
| Not contractual | The benefit is not provided under the terms of the employee’s contract |
| Not reward for work | The benefit is not provided in recognition of particular services performed (or to be performed) |
If any condition is not met, the entire benefit is taxable — not just the amount above £50.
The £50 Limit
The £50 limit is per benefit, not per employee per year. There is no annual cap on the number of trivial benefits that can be given to each employee (with one exception for directors — see below).
Key points about the £50 threshold:
- It includes VAT — if a gift costs £41.67 plus VAT of £8.33 = £50, it qualifies
- If the benefit costs £50.01 or more, the entire amount is taxable (there is no partial exemption)
- The cost is the cost to the employer, not the retail value
- If a benefit is shared among employees, the cost is divided equally when assessing the £50 limit
What Qualifies as a Trivial Benefit?
Common Examples
| Benefit | Qualifies? |
|---|---|
| Birthday gift (flowers, chocolates, wine) up to £50 | Yes |
| Christmas gift (hamper, gift card for goods only) up to £50 | Yes |
| Taking the team for a meal (cost per head under £50) | Yes |
| Seasonal gifts (Easter eggs, summer treat) | Yes |
| Occasional cinema or theatre tickets up to £50 | Yes |
| Gift card for a specific retailer (not exchangeable for cash) up to £50 | Yes |
What Does Not Qualify
| Benefit | Why Not |
|---|---|
| Cash | Fails the “not cash” condition |
| Cash voucher (redeemable for cash) | Fails the “not cash” condition |
| Gift over £50 | Exceeds the cost limit |
| Performance bonus (even if non-cash) | Reward for services performed |
| Contractual benefits (e.g., annual gym membership in contract) | Provided under contract |
| Salary sacrifice arrangement | Part of the employment contract |
Gift Cards and Vouchers
Retail vouchers and gift cards that can only be exchanged for goods or services (not cash) do qualify, provided the £50 limit is met. However, vouchers that can be exchanged for cash or have a cash redemption option are treated as cash vouchers and do not qualify.
Directors of Close Companies
For directors (and their families) of close companies (broadly, companies controlled by 5 or fewer shareholders), there is an additional annual cap of £300 on trivial benefits per tax year.
| Recipient | Per-Benefit Limit | Annual Cap |
|---|---|---|
| Employee (not a director of a close company) | £50 | No cap |
| Director of a close company | £50 | £300 per tax year |
| Family member of a director | £50 | £300 per tax year |
This means a director of a private limited company can receive up to six trivial benefits of £50 each per year under this exemption.
Close Company Directors: Practical Use
Many owner-managed businesses use the trivial benefits exemption strategically. A director can receive up to £300 of tax-free benefits per year, and if their spouse or civil partner is also an employee or director, they can receive a further £300. This provides up to £600 per couple per year in tax-free perks.
Tax Savings
The tax saving from using trivial benefits instead of paying the equivalent as salary or bonus:
| Benefit Value | Tax Saved (Basic Rate Employee) | Tax Saved (Higher Rate Employee) |
|---|---|---|
| £50 | £16.60 (income tax + NI) | £23.60 |
| £300 (director annual cap) | £99.60 | £141.60 |
The employer also saves on employer National Insurance (13.8%) that would otherwise be due on a salary payment.
How Trivial Benefits Are Treated
No Reporting Required
Qualifying trivial benefits do not need to be:
- Reported on form P11D
- Included in the employee’s PAYE tax calculation
- Subject to Class 1 or Class 1A National Insurance
Corporation Tax Deduction
The cost of providing trivial benefits is a tax-deductible expense for corporation tax or income tax purposes, just like any other staff welfare cost.
VAT
If the employer is VAT-registered, the VAT on trivial benefits is generally not reclaimable because the items are being provided free to employees (business entertainment/gifts rules apply). However, this depends on the specific circumstances and the nature of the benefit.
Trivial Benefits vs Annual Events Exemption
The trivial benefits exemption is separate from the annual events exemption, which covers staff parties and events:
| Exemption | Limit | Key Difference |
|---|---|---|
| Trivial benefits | £50 per benefit | Individual gifts and perks |
| Annual events | £150 per head per year | Staff parties, Christmas dinners |
The two exemptions can be used together. For example, you could host a Christmas party costing up to £150 per head under the annual events exemption and also give each employee a £50 Christmas hamper under the trivial benefits exemption.
Trivial Benefits vs Salary
It is important that trivial benefits are genuinely discretionary and not a replacement for salary:
- Benefits must not be part of a salary sacrifice arrangement
- They must not be given in exchange for giving up cash pay
- They must not be expected or contractual
- If HMRC considers the benefits are effectively disguised remuneration, they will be taxable
Record Keeping
While there is no reporting requirement to HMRC, employers should maintain records of trivial benefits provided, including:
- Date the benefit was provided
- Description of the benefit
- Cost (including VAT)
- Recipient (employee name)
- For directors of close companies: a running total to track the £300 annual limit
These records support the tax treatment if HMRC enquires and form part of your overall accounting records . They should be retained for at least 3 years after the end of the tax year.
Interaction with Self-Assessment
Since trivial benefits are exempt from tax and NI, they do not need to be reported on the employee’s self-assessment return. They are invisible for income tax purposes and do not affect tax bands, personal allowance tapering, or any other income-based calculations.