DEANNA RAMSEY, CPA
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Service Packages
  • Info Center
  • News
  • Financial Tools
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Client Portal
(859) 873-0981
Access Client Portal
gift
November 18 2017

How does a business handle holiday gift-giving?

Business Help, FAQs, News Letters, Tax Help, Tax Law

Are Holiday gifts deductible?

Holiday gifts made to customers are generally deductible as ordinary and necessary business expenses as long as the taxpayer can demonstrate that such gifts maintain or improve customer goodwill. Such gifts must bear a direct relationship to the taxpayer’s business and must be made with a reasonable expectation of a financial return commensurate with the amount of the gift. However, the $25 annual limitation per recipient on deductibility is applicable to holiday gifts, unless a statutory exceptions applies.

Tax-free gifts vs taxable compensation

Holiday turkeys and other holiday distributions of nominal value made by an employer to employees to promote goodwill are treated as tax-free gifts to those employees instead of taxable compensation. If the employer gives cash, gift certificates or similar items of readily convertible cash value, however, the value of those gifts is considered additional compensation regardless of the amount.  But if holiday gift certificates given by an employer to its employees are redeemable only for merchandise and were not convertible to cash, they may be considered tax-free gifts.

Keep your gifts “nominal”

Employers can give items worth a “nominal amount” without fear that the IRS will tax the employee. Gifts of items worth more, or a gift of any amount of cash, risks the IRS taking the view that the gift belongs in the employee’s gross income. What constitutes a nominal amount is not crystal clear, but keeping a gift under $25 is erring on the safe side. It also assures a situation in which the employer can deduct the expense of the gift while not having it taxable to the employee.

How do I Compute the Nanny Tax ACA Requirements Remain in Effect for 2017 Tax Season

Related Posts

News Letters

FinCEN

News Letters

Taxpayers see wave of summer email, text scams; IRS urges extra caution with flood of schemes involving Economic Impact Payments, Employee Retention Credits, tax refunds

News Letters

IRS announces administrative transition period for new Roth catch up requirement; catch-up contributions still permitted after 2023

Search

Recent Posts

  • FinCEN.svgFinCEN
    January 5, 2024
  • scam alert 1Taxpayers see wave of summer email, text scams; IRS urges extra caution with flood of schemes involving Economic Impact Payments, Employee Retention Credits, tax refunds
    October 23, 2023
  • 2IRS announces administrative transition period for new Roth catch up requirement; catch-up contributions still permitted after 2023
    October 23, 2023

Categories

  • Audit Advice (1)
  • Business Help (7)
  • Estate Planning (1)
  • FAQs (6)
  • Health Care (1)
  • News Letters (28)
  • Tax Calendars (3)
  • Tax Credit (3)
  • Tax Help (7)
  • Tax Law (9)
DEANNA RAMSEY, CPA
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Service Packages
  • Info Center
  • News
  • Financial Tools
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Client Portal
Deanna Ramsey, CPA, LLC | 205 Frankfort St., Versailles, KY 40383
Copyright Deanna Ramsey, CPA, LLC 2017. All right reserved.
New Business Law

Greetings, and I hope all is well. I am reaching out to you today to ensure you are aware of certain tax laws that affect pass-through entities in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. You may elect on an annual basis to pay Kentucky income tax and expense those taxes at the entity or business level, which could provide tax savings to you on your personal tax return. Under existing law, a “pass-through entity” (PTE) includes any partnership, S corporation, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, limited partnership, or similar entity recognized by the laws of Kentucky that is not taxed for federal purposes at the entity-level, but instead passes to its owners their proportionate share of income, deductions, gains, losses, credits, and similar attributes.

 

Electing to pay Kentucky income tax at the business level is optional and must be done each tax year on KY Form 740-PTET, along with making the requisite estimated tax payments using KY Form 740-PTET-ES. The electing entity may be subject to penalties if the estimated tax payments are not made timely and correctly. An election to pay estimated payments through the business entity for a particular tax year is binding for all entity owners for the entire tax year. An election for a year is only for a single year and subsequent elections must be made each year you wish to pay Kentucky income tax at the entity level.

 

Owners of electing entities are entitled to a refundable credit against Kentucky’s individual income tax equal to 100% of their proportionate share of the tax paid by the electing entity. The entity must report to each owner the owner’s proportionate share of tax paid for the taxable year. This provision prevents double taxation at both the entity and owner levels, allowing the business to pay and expense the taxes, thereby no longer recognizing them as an Owner’s Draw.

 

We encourage you to contact us to discuss how this applies to you and to address any questions you may have about your specific tax situation, or if you require assistance with calculating your estimated tax payments. We are here to help you navigate these requirements and ensure your business remains compliant.