New VAT risk to employee benefits

-

Businesses that fail to review their employee benefit packages or don’t look at the VAT implications for new benefits do so at their peril following a new approach introduced by the taxman, warns accountants James Cowper.

Salary sacrifice schemes and the provision of benefits have long been a thorn in the side of HMRC, but VAT historically was not an issue where employees receive benefits through salary sacrifice schemes. This changed when a new 20% VAT liability for employers and employees, the result of a European Court of Justice decision, came into force on 1 January.

Head of VAT Service at James Cowper Ruth Corkin explained: “The impact of the new VAT treatment is set to be wide-ranging. Benefits such as shopping vouchers, gym membership, subsidised meals at work and cycle to work schemes are all affected. Employers must now either not claim input tax relating to these supplies, at a cost to the business, or charge the employee output tax on the value of the benefit.

“Charging staff would, of course be highly unpopular, particularly at a time when pay freezes are commonplace and I fear that companies will in some cases decide the lesser of two evils is to simply in future slash their benefit packages.”

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

The VAT charge does not affect employees with salary sacrifice contract dates on or before 27 July 2011 but will still apply to them when their benefits contracts are renewed or renegotiated. Benefits that are available to all staff, like a workplace gym, are also not affected.

Ruth added: “Employers have been steadily waking up to the VAT charge since the New Year. HMRC is also clearly focusing on the issue because questions about benefits in kind packages have been asked on a number of inspections that I have attended recently. Leaving the VAT issue to one side is likely to cause headaches for businesses at an inspection. Add to that interest and penalties and it could be an expensive issue to ignore.”

Companies that have traditionally provided benefits by way of salary sacrifice should now be reviewing their benefit packages to see which benefits would attract a VAT charge. James Cowper recommends that any business concerned about how it could be affected by the new rules seeks professional guidance.

Pamela Flores is an events professional with experience at Symposium Events, a UK-based conference and events organization. She has worked in editorial and event coordination roles within the HR and expatriate management sector, contributing to the organization of major conferences including the Expatriate Management and Global Mobility conference. Her background spans online editorial work and events management within the professional conference industry.

Latest news

Grant Wyatt: AI is as good as the standard you set

Most professionals treat AI like a vending machine: they click, prompt, and hope. When the output is mediocre, they blame the tool.

AI adoption accelerates as employers rethink workforce size

Employers are using AI to address staffing pressures, redesign roles and improve productivity as workforce planning increasingly incorporates automation.

Workers ‘pushing through illness’ as workplace pressure grows

Burnout, stress and working while sick are becoming increasingly common as many employees struggle to cope with workplace pressure.

‘Job centre in your pocket’ plan raises questions over role of AI in employment support

The government's AI-powered employment assistant has sparked debate about how technology should support jobseekers while maintaining trust.
- Advertisement -

Employers urged to spot gambling harms during World Cup

Employers are being urged to watch for gambling-related harm at work as the 2026 World Cup brings weeks of daytime matches and betting activity.

Habits for health: small changes that lead to bigger gains

From walking meetings to better sleep routines, simple habits can improve health, wellbeing and performance across the workplace.

Must read

James Ewing: The future of “human” resources

Robotic Process Automation could be part of HR's future.

Seren Trewavas: What HR can learn from Ryanair

Earlier this month, budget airline Ryanair  announced it would...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you