Employee gifts
An increasing number of private and public organisations are taking initiatives to make themselves more attractive as employers. Individual recognition plays a major role in this. Employee gifts also offer an ideal opportunity to optimise your employees’ salaries. This blog gives you a clear overview of the options and outlines the legal conditions for each one.
The work-related costs scheme
In the Netherlands, the legal conditions regarding employee gifts were simplified from 1 January 2015 through the work-related costs scheme. This scheme allows you to spend 1.92% of the taxable wage bill, up to €400,000, freely on your employees. If the wage bill is above that, you may spend 1.18% freely. This is called the discretionary scope (‘vrije ruimte’ in Dutch).
To secure a tax-friendly employee gift, you now only need to consider two things:
• The total wage bill = Total wages + social contributions payable by the employer
• The usual value of gifts within the company / industry
We distinguish between tax exemption for the employee and tax deductibility for the employer.
The discretionary scope
The discretionary scope is redetermined every year. In 2024, the discretionary scope on your taxable salary up to €400,000 is 1.92%. On the amount of the wage bill above €400,000, the discretionary scope in 2024 is 1.18%.
Rule of thumb:
Loonsom ≤ 400.000 = 1,92%
Loonsom ≥ 400.000 = 1,18%
Tax-free allowance
That discretionary scope can be spent on untaxed allowances*, including employee gifts. As long as you stay within that scope, you don’t pay payroll tax. Outside that discretionary scope, you pay a higher final tax rate of 80% on the part that exceeds that discretionary scope.
Example:
- Christmas gift
- Birthday gift
- Gym subscription
- A good chair for their home office
Tax-free homeworking allowance
Since 2022, you are allowed to give employees a tax-free allowance for expenses they incur when working from home such as gas, water, electricity, toilet paper, coffee and tea. This taxfree allowance increases to €2,35 per day in 2024.
With the exemption of the homeworking allowance, working from home or hybrid work is officially part of the work culture in the Netherlands. The allowance is therefore not deducted from the tax-free allowance for employee gifts.
So it pays to keep a close eye on that discretionary scope. In doing so, it is best to take into account the fringe benefits* you offer to your employees. The fringe benefits are the rewards you agree with your employee on top of their salary. These may be financial in nature, but not necessarily. A company bicycle or car, a thirteenth month’s salary or company savings are examples.
Confused? This short example of a calculation explains the scheme:
Taxable wage bill €350,000 | Taxable wage bill €900,000 | |
Discretionary scope | 350,000 x 1,92% = €6,720 Total = €6,720 | 400,000 x 1,92% = €7,680 + 500,000 x 1,18% = €5,900 Total = €13,580 |
Finally, you need to consider the usability test. This prescribes that the value of gifts should not deviate by more than 30% from what is usual within your company or industry. Read more about it here.
Tax deductibility for employers
Costs for staff gifts and Christmas hampers serve alimited business purpose. These are therefore mixed costs, which are not deductible for income or corporate tax up to a threshold amount. This threshold goes up from €5,100 to €5,600 in 2024.
For income tax, €5,600 of mixed costs are not deductible from your profit. You may also choose to use the 80% rule in your tax return. This allows you to deduct 80% of the mixed costs, but not the other 20%. You can therefore choose the approach that is most beneficial to you.
For corporate tax, things work slightly differently. A company subject to corporate tax may not deduct up to €5,600 of mixed costs from its profit. Or 0.4% of the company’s total wage bill, whichever is higher. There is also an alternative corporate tax arrangement that allows companies to as standard deduct only 73.5% of mixed costs, and therefore 26.5% are non-deductible.
The €25 rule
Do you give your employees a gift that isn’t really linked to the employer-employee relationship? In that case, we refer to ‘pay’,
and that amount will not be part of the discretionary scope. That amount will be subject to the €25 rule, and is exempt from tax.
Take, for example, a mourning wreath, which is a gift given out of courtesy and sympathy. The gift is given based on a personal rather than professional relationship.
Three conditions apply in this case:
- It concerns a personal gift in a situation where others would also give such a gift (e.g. newborn, birthday, marriage, illness, etc.)
- You don’t give money or a voucher
- The gift does not exceed €25 (incl. VAT)
Zero valuations
Certain workplace facilities don’t count as part of the discretionary scope. They are given a socalled zero valuation. These may include:
• Workwear
• Coffee and tea in the workplace
• Gym at the workplace
The tax authorities provide an overview of benefits in kind for which a zero valuation applies in the work-related costs scheme. (only in Dutch)
The work-related costs scheme in practice
Buying employee gifts doesn’t stop at arranging a gift. Administrative processing for the Tax Office is also an important part of the work involved. By correctly and cleverly applying the regulations offered by the work-related costs scheme, as an employer you can avoid unnecessary extra charges.
How to record them correctly? This flowchart will make it clear.
This flowchart is purely informative. No rights can be derived from it and it is not exhaustive. The exact design of the work-related costs scheme varies depending on the organisation and occasion, and is entirely the responsibility of the organisation. For a more complete overview, please refer to this document from Interfisc (in Dutch).
Examples of gift-giving occasions
Basis for your administration
The checklist below can guide your gift policy. Or you can use it to incorporate existing policies into a similar checklist. Your gift policy often includes specific amounts for gift-giving occasions. You can then also work those amounts into a checklist as in the example below. Don’t yet have a targeted gift policy? You can also make a distinction between gifts above and below €25.
Gift | No wages – €25 rule | Wages – Zero valuation | Wages – Discretionary scope |
Gift card of €25 for birthday: | x | ||
Birth present of €20: | x | ||
€15 bottle of wine for an anniversary: | x | ||
€40 bottle of champagne for wedding anniversary: | x | ||
€30 cake for employee at home: | x | ||
€50 cake to share in the workplace: | x | ||
€20 chocolate gift for a new home: | x | ||
€25 group gift for a wedding: | x | ||
€20 fruit basket for an illness: | x | ||
A €15 candy jar for the workplace: | x | ||
Gift card (any value) for Christmas or New Year: | x | ||
Gym at work: | x | ||
Gym subscription: | x |
Gifts
Physical gifts
Build better relationships with beautiful gifts for any occasion. Would your business partner/ employee prefer fragrant flowers, delicious chocolate or a sharing basket? You know best what to choose.
Score some extra points by personalising your gift or its packaging. This way the lucky recipient will never forget who the gift was from. You can also add a message to thank, congratulate or give your employee or business partner a bit of a boost – turning it into a unique gift.
Gift cards
Trying to find a personal gift for everyone often seems like an impossible task. But it can be done. More and more companies are turning to gift cards that the employees or business partners can use to choose their own gift from a range of participating retailers. Gift cards also come with another benefit: they aren’t subject to VAT. For this reason, and the fact that employees get to choose for themselves, gift cards are becoming more and more popular each year.
A lot of retailers offer gift cards. The downside is that gift cards often have a limited validity and, as the giver, you are again choosing the gift on behalf of the recipient. To avoid that, consider using providers like Giftcards.nl, Primera and Kadonation.
These companies offer gift cards redeemable at a range of affiliated partners so that every employee or business partner has plenty of choice when it comes to spending their gift card. This way, the recipient can choose the gift they really want.
Kadonation Gifts
At Kadonation, we even take it a few steps further. Firstly, we offer a range of physical gifts: brownies, drinks, flowers, cake, gift baskets… There’s something for everyone. Secondly, we also have the Kadonation Gift Card that can be combined and split, and is redeemable at over 90 popular shops (such as Bol.com, Rituals, Coolblue, Zalando, HEMA, Dille & Kamille & Decathlon …) and charities.
The gift voucher can also be completely customised with the recipient’s name, a personal message and your company logo or other branding. Our physical gifts can also be personalised with a logo and/or a personal message.
On top of that, we offer the ultimate choice concept: Kadonation Smile. The simplest way to give the freedom of choice. Together, we’ll put together a range of gifts to match your budget. The recipient can then choose their dream gift on a gift website that is completely personalised with your logo, company colours and personal messages.
And of course, our gifts also meet all the conditions for you to get the most out of the legal conditions described in this white paper.
Kadonation Select
In addition to the Kadonation Gifts, we have also developed an all-in-one gift platform for people-focused companies: Kadonation Select.
With our intuitive platform, it takes you just minutes – not hours – to give hundreds of gifts. Boost your sales & loyalty by including everyone. Plus you can make life even easier by automating your gift and reward policies.
Discover Kadonation Select