Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation


Latest Accounting News
Inflation continues to keep SME owners up at night, survey finds
Payday Super: 6 Things Small Businesses Need to Know
ATO issues new guidance on penalties for non-compliance with STP
Strategies for Effective Debt Recovery for Small Businesses
Succession planning to remain major focus for ATO this year
Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) Guide – Key Checklist & Rates
Buy an existing business
Most Valuable Industries in the World 2026
Will a shareholders agreement protect a business from a family law dispute?
ATO crackdown on profit restructuring leading to higher tax bills: RSM
Super balance not a priority for young Aussies, SMC reports
When to Update Your Business Trading Terms
Support for rebuilding after natural disasters
Are you ready for Payday superannuation?
Calculate your costs to start a business
Most Reliable Car Brands in 2026
Payday super part 2: not quite ‘all systems go’
Privacy Compliance Sweep 2026: Is Your Business Ready?
6 ways to improve your business plan
‘Looking like a rough start’: SMEs set to feel the pinch as CPI spikes
Student loans debt update
New SMSF education directions
Accountants must keep ‘watchful eye’ on financial abuse
Rare and vanishing: Animals That May Go Extinct Soon
What is a Commercial Lease?
8 tips to improve your online sales
ATO cracking down on tax dodgers trying to leave the country
Digital Assets You Forgot You Own (and Why They Still Matter at Tax Time)
‘Not insurmountable’: What accountants need to know ahead of Payday Super
Heading overseas? Centrelink and the ATO might need to know
The ATO’s new draft rules could change your holiday home tax claims
Which country produces the most electricity annually?
Employee Christmas Parties and Gifts – Any FBT?

 

The Christmas break-up party and/or gifts to employees can be exempt from Fringe Benefits if a few rules are followed.

 



       


The cost can be exempt as either an exempt property benefit or an exempt minor benefit.


Exempt Property Benefits


  • Costs like food and drinks provided for employees as part of a Christmas party, on a working day on business premises and consumed by current employees of that business.

Exempt Minor Benefits


(Applicable when the property benefits exemption doesn’t apply, i.e. because the party is held at a restaurant or separate venue).


  • Cost per employee must be less than $300 (GST inclusive)
  • Associates of employees such as spouses and children are regarded as employees (hence the limit for an employee and partner would be $300 each)

 


Gifts are also considered separately from the Christmas party, so provided the cost of a gift and the party are each less than $300, then both would be exempt from FBT.


The minor benefits threshold of less than $300 applies to each benefit provided, not to the total value of all associated benefits.


 


 


AcctWeb




21st-December-2020