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Questions concerning this employee benefit.

From The Tax Adviser:
Employer-Provided Employee Meals


E mployers in certain businesses and industries that provide employees with meals during the workday can deduct the costs of those meals if they are ordinary and necessary business expenses. As a rule, the IRS limits the business meals deduction to 50% of cost, although it may allow a full deduction if the costs qualify as a de minimis fringe benefit. Such a benefit means employees receive the meals in a nondiscriminatory eating facility located on or near the employers business premises and the facilitys revenue must equal or exceed its direct operating costs.

The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 changed the rules somewhat. Now employers can receive a full deduction for the cost of employee meals even if the facilitys revenues do not exceed its costs if those meals are provided primarily to employees for a substantially noncompensatory business reason of the employer.


Substantially Noncompensatory Business
The IRS considers the following factors when determining whether a substantially noncompensatory business reason is present:


Need For Documentation and Enforcement
To avoid many of the problems in this area, employers should implement strict recordkeeping in the substantiation of their employees meal expenses. Such substantiation should show the relative charges and costs associated with these meals, and the quantity and times meals are taken by each employee. At the same time, a companys management should implement strict policies to ensure employees are not taking more meals than authorized; records of infractions and disciplinary actions should show that the employer truly regulates the process.

These precautions are very important; meals determined not to be deductible as de minimis fringe benefits may be subject to a host of unexpected (negative) consequences. If the meals must be considered wages, the employer may be liable for withholding taxes and could be subject to penalties for failure to withhold. In addition, the values of such meals would have to be included in the employees gross incomes, and it is uncertain what amounts would be required to be included in determining those valuesthe meals actual costs or their fair market value (probably a much higher figure).

For a discussion of this and other developments, see the Tax Clinic, edited by Edward Sair, in the March 1998 issue of The Tax Adviser.

Nicholas Fiore, editor
The Tax Adviser


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