Business Gym Tax Deduction Guidance

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I know you have been thinking about employee fitness and possibly a gym or other athletic facility.

 

To be tax deductible, your gym or other athletic facilities must be primarily for the benefit of your employees—other than employees who are officers, shareholders, or other owners who own a 10 percent or greater interest in the business or other highly compensated employees.

 

For the 10 percent ownership test, the law treats employees as owning any interest owned by their brothers and sisters, spouses, ancestors (such as parents and grandparents), and lineal descendants (such as children and grandchildren).

 

The highly compensated group consists of employees who earned more than $150,000 for the preceding year.

 

The gym or other athletic facility must benefit the rank-and-file employees’ group more than the owner and highly compensated group. Think of this primary-benefit test as a 51-49 test.

 

This means that the rank-and-file employees and their families must use the facility on more days than the owner and highly compensated group does.

 

To see if you pass the 51-49 test, look only at days of use of the facility.

 

Example. Rank-and-file employees use the gym 235 days during the year and you, the business owner, use it 137 days. The gym passes the 51-49 test. It’s tax-free to the users and deductible to the business as an employee recreational facility.

 

If you would like to discuss the tax benefits of providing a gym or other athletic facility for your business, please don’t hesitate to contact us here