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Company Gym Gets Favorable Tax Treatment | Your company probably offers an array of fringe benefits to its employees, including health insurance and group-term life insurance. While there are certain requirements, these fringe benefits are generally deductible by the company and tax-free to the employees as long as they are not discriminatory in nature. (If your company decides to reward a select group, such as limiting benefits to only the corporate officers, the benefits are generally taxable to the recipients.)
However, there's one key exception. Suppose you’re a fitness devotee who works out on a regular basis. You can have the company set up a gym at the office for all employees, or maybe just the exclusive use of the top brass. There are no tax repercussions because the usual nondiscrimination rules do not apply to an athletic facility located on an employer's
premises.
For this purpose, an “athletic facility” includes a gymnasium, swimming pool, tennis court or golf course. Note that the athletic facility must generally be located on the employer's premises.
The tax exclusion does not extend to employer-paid country club or health club memberships that are off-site. In other words, the payment of club dues to an outside facility or health club is a taxable fringe benefit.
Bonus: To sweeten this tax perk even further, you can allow your spouse and dependent children to use the facilities.
Can your company deduct the cost of setting up and operating the fitness facility? Yes, but in order to take the write-offs, it must be made available to employees who are not owners or members of the highly compensated top echelon of the firm.
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Treadmills and Triceps: The Benefits of Getting Your Staff Moving It’s no secret that a healthy lifestyle reduces stress and improves energy levels and productivity. That message hit home in the workplace when companies began offering fitness programs to employees. Paid exercise breaks, on-site athletic facilities, nutrition counseling, and stress management programs offer benefits to both staff and employers. A University of Michigan study found that companies with corporate fitness programs experienced reduced absenteeism, lower insurance costs, fewer disabling injuries and illnesses, increased productivity, and improved morale. |
This article is provided as a service by: L.S. Sherman Litigation Consulting.
LSSLC is a group of complex litigation specialists helping attorneys prepare successful complex litigation through the management of detailed technical information and engagement of experienced testifying experts of unsurpassed quality.
Contact Linda Sherman: 610-642-7755
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LSSLC, LLC provides the information in this newsletter for general guidance only, and does not constitute the provision of legal advice or professional consulting of any kind. The information provided herein should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional tax, accounting, legal, or other competent advisers. Before making any decision or taking any action, you should consult a professional adviser who has been provided with all pertinent facts relevant to your particular situation.
The information is provided "as is," with no assurance or guarantee of completeness, accuracy, or timeliness of the information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to warranties of performance, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose.
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