Christmas bonus - hospitality industry - yay or nay?

Christmas bonus - hospitality industry - yay or nay?

Author
Discussion

larrylamb11

Original Poster:

641 posts

266 months

Wednesday 11th December 2024
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I've recently taken on a senior role in a charity whose retained staff are essentially engaged in hospitality - kitchen staff, grounds staff, cleaning staff etc. what I would designate as 'domestic staff'. The vast majority of the staff work properly hard.
In line with what I believe would be customary for domestic staff, I am suggesting they should be given a 'Christmas bonus' as a thank you for the work they've done through the year and as a sign of our appreciation for their efforts - I am suggesting £100 per person for everyone (hardly generous, but not insulting). They have received bonuses in the past.

The charity directors are positioning not to award any bonuses or gifts.

Am I off the mark here? Are Christmas bonuses a thing of the past?

soad

33,954 posts

191 months

Wednesday 11th December 2024
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Usually get a bottle of cheap wine and a box of chocolates?

SydneyBridge

10,184 posts

173 months

Wednesday 11th December 2024
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I worked for a small company that gave nice food/drink hampers to all staff

Simpo Two

89,086 posts

280 months

Wednesday 11th December 2024
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larrylamb11 said:
The charity directors are positioning not to award any bonuses or gifts.
One could say that is not very... charitable...

But perhaps their view is that the money in the coffers has been donated by people to be spent on a specific purpose, not staff bonuses.

Sy1441

1,282 posts

175 months

Thursday 12th December 2024
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Non-exec of a charity here. Having been drafted on to the board to bring operational and HR experience my advice is pretty much always "Forget it's a charity and pretend it's a business" then the decisions are generally made because the outcomes are positive for the business. In my retail and hospitality businesses everyone will get a gift, will either be vouchers or a gift bag of things we've picked out worth.

Mick Dastardly

269 posts

39 months

Thursday 12th December 2024
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We have 23 staff and on Tuesday this week we nipped to the bank and drew out £4600, stuck 200 quid in a load of Christmas cards and went round and gave it to our (mostly) excellent employees.

Started doing it in 2020 after Covid hit and they really stepped up to support the businesses, and we’ve carried it on ever since. They truly are all very appreciative, me and the missus get a warm glow inside and so it’s a win win for all concerned.

Countdown

44,528 posts

211 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Mick Dastardly said:
We have 23 staff and on Tuesday this week we nipped to the bank and drew out £4600, stuck 200 quid in a load of Christmas cards and went round and gave it to our (mostly) excellent employees.

Started doing it in 2020 after Covid hit and they really stepped up to support the businesses, and we’ve carried it on ever since. They truly are all very appreciative, me and the missus get a warm glow inside and so it’s a win win for all concerned.
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?

trickywoo

12,992 posts

245 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
I was thinking the same.

If it was me I’d stick to £150 (inc vat) each and give a hamper or similar. It then falls into the ‘annual party’ expense category and is reclaimable and has no NI, P11 etc. implications.

Mick Dastardly

269 posts

39 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.

Countdown

44,528 posts

211 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Mick Dastardly said:
Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.
You'll have paid income tax on that (and probably at a higher level than your Employees) You may also have had to pay Corporation tax on that, so it's probably cheaper just to pay them via payroll.

Or do what Tricky suggested and give them a hamper.

Giantt

708 posts

51 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Simpo Two said:
larrylamb11 said:
The charity directors are positioning not to award any bonuses or gifts.
One could say that is not very... charitable...

But perhaps their view is that the money in the coffers has been donated by people to be spent on a specific purpose, not staff bonuses.
People need to look at CEO and senior staff salaries and perks then

Giantt

708 posts

51 months

Friday 13th December 2024
quotequote all
Mick Dastardly said:
We have 23 staff and on Tuesday this week we nipped to the bank and drew out £4600, stuck 200 quid in a load of Christmas cards and went round and gave it to our (mostly) excellent employees.

Started doing it in 2020 after Covid hit and they really stepped up to support the businesses, and we’ve carried it on ever since. They truly are all very appreciative, me and the missus get a warm glow inside and so it’s a win win for all concerned.
Despite what others say,I'd commend you on this,just hope Mutley got his share

MustangGT

13,207 posts

295 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Mick Dastardly said:
Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.
Not so, any emoluments of that size paid to employees as cash or cash equivalents are treated as taxable income for the individual.

trickywoo

12,992 posts

245 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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MustangGT said:
Mick Dastardly said:
Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.
Not so, any emoluments of that size paid to employees as cash or cash equivalents are treated as taxable income for the individual.
I'm not getting into a pile on over what is obviously a thoughtful thing for an employer to do but HMRC won't look at £4k+ as incidental and the cash gift should really be on the payslip and subject to the relevant PAYE and NI. I'm quite surprised your accountant hasn't said anything if you've done this before.

Greenmantle

1,692 posts

123 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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MustangGT said:
Mick Dastardly said:
Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.
Not so, any emoluments of that size paid to employees as cash or cash equivalents are treated as taxable income for the individual.
I'll just leave this here

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldwwOD5IY98

Compared to the above non payment of income tax on £200 is negligible!

ChocolateFrog

31,993 posts

188 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Giantt said:
Simpo Two said:
larrylamb11 said:
The charity directors are positioning not to award any bonuses or gifts.
One could say that is not very... charitable...

But perhaps their view is that the money in the coffers has been donated by people to be spent on a specific purpose, not staff bonuses.
People need to look at CEO and senior staff salaries and perks then
No it's the cleaners on minimum wage that are taking money out of the coffers. hehe

Countdown

44,528 posts

211 months

Friday 13th December 2024
quotequote all
MustangGT said:
Mick Dastardly said:
Countdown said:
At the risk of sounding like the Xmas Grinch how do you account for the tax/NI on that?
We take the money out as taxable income, and then it’s entirely up to us if we want to give it away to our employees.
Not so, any emoluments of that size paid to employees as cash or cash equivalents are treated as taxable income for the individual.
Given that the payment is made out of taxed income then Mick is probably fine. If Mick had been paying out of company finds rather than personal funds it would be a different kettle of fish.

blueg33

41,372 posts

239 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Trustee of one Charity and Director of another

The one I am Trustee of does not do a Christmas bonus but does have an annual bonus.

The one I am a director off doesn't have a christmas bonus but contributes £20 per head to a christmas event"

cts1975

359 posts

183 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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I give my employees £100 each at Christmas. It's £100 well spent thumbup
Some of them have come from large national companies that never paid Christmas bonuses so really appreciate the bonus.

Gary29

4,534 posts

114 months

Friday 13th December 2024
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Is this just the hospitality industry we're talking about? Or are Xmas bonuses becoming a thing of the past?

We're lucky that we get quite a generous bonus based on our annual profits. I thought this was a fairly common deal?