Friday, December 10, 2010

YOU GET A BIGGER DEDUCTION FROM YOUR HOLIDAY PARTY

Who doesn't love a party? Holiday office parties are a fantastic way to show your employees you appreciate them. Showing appreciation for the people you work with every day is especially crucial during challenging economic times.

Let me get to the best part: The cost of throwing parties for your employees is 100 percent deductible. The food, the beverages, the decorations -- all those expenses can be deducted. The only caveats: The expenses must not be overly extravagant (e.g., champagne, caviar and lobster for a holiday luncheon), and the parties must be infrequent (weekly parties are likely to raise an eyebrow or two at the IRS).

Another common business practice is hosting holiday events for clients. Some choose to throw one big party; others opt to take individual clients out for a meal. Either way, when you entertain clients and potential clients, the tax benefit is the same: You may deduct only 50 percent of the cost. The requirements here are that the expenses not be extravagant, and business must be discussed or conducted either during or adjacent to the meal (e.g., going out to dinner after a meeting).

HAPPY HOLIDAYS