Meals for employees an especially valuable perk
You’re considering providing free meals to your employees to help them with the rising cost of living. You’ll be able to buy in bulk and so access discounts not normally open to individual employees. How will HMRC view your plans?

Food inflation
While the headline rate of inflation is slowly heading south, the figure for food and other groceries remains persistently higher. One way to mitigate this is to purchase in bulk. However, that comes with problems such as shelf life storage and, of course, financial means. As an employer you can help by providing meals in the workplace for which you’re entitled to a tax deduction from your profits, plus the perk is often tax and NI free to your workers.
Conditions for exemption
For employer-provided meals to be tax and NI-free perks, they must be prepared in a canteen where they are provided for employees generally or to those at a particular location. Alternatively if they are served on your business premises and conditions A to C below must be met. Condition A. The meals are provided on a reasonable scale. Caviar may be off the menu but steak and chips with a drink would be okay. Condition B. That all employees or all of them at a particular location, e.g. a particular branch office, may obtain either a free or subsidised meal and/or a free or subsidised meal voucher or token. Condition C. If the meals are provided in a restaurant or dining room at a time when meals are being served to the public, part of this is designated for the use of employees only and the meals are taken in that part.
It’s not necessary for all employees to receive the free or subsidised meals, just that they are offered them.
Where the food is provided away from your business premises, the exemption only applies if it’s provided in a designated area of a restaurant etc. that’s not open to the public for at least the period it’s being used as your canteen.
Meals for selected employees
Meals that don’t meet the conditions for exemption, for example because they are not available to all employees, are a taxable benefit where they are provided to employees and directors. An exception to this applies for meals taken in the course of work-related training which requires employees to travel away from their normal workplace to attend. The location must be sufficiently distant from the workplace that the employee would be entitled to claim a tax deduction for the cost of subsistence as if they had been travelling to, say, a customer to carry out work at their premises.
If the location of the training means that the meal isn’t exempt, it may instead be covered by the trivial benefits exemption (which applies to benefits costing up to £50 per head). For the exemption to apply the meal should not be provided as a reward for attending the training but as a genuine perk. You might also be able to argue they are covered by the main exemption because they are meals provided to all employees “at a particular location”.
Fancy a tax-free cuppa?
While the exemption refers to “meals”, HMRC accepts that free tea, coffee and other drinks count as trivial benefits and so are exempt. That means you can provide limitless beverages, perhaps accompanied by a biscuit or other sweet treat, without worrying about tax or NI.
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