Key Takeaways
- Business meals = 50% deductible.
- Taxpayer or employee must be present.
- Cannot be lavish or extravagant.
- Entertainment = 100% non-deductible (separate meals OK).
- Company parties for all employees = 100% deductible.
- Office snacks/coffee = 0% deductible (current law).
Last updated: January 2026
Business Meals (50% Limitation)
Why This Matters for the Exam
Meal deductions are frequently tested. Know the 50% rule, the 100% exceptions, and the entertainment trap.
Expect at least 3-4 questions on meals.
General Rule: 50% Deduction
| Requirement | Description |
|---|---|
| Ordinary and necessary | Standard business practice |
| Taxpayer present | You or employee must attend |
| Not lavish | Reasonable under circumstances |
| Business connection | With business contact |
100% Deduction Exceptions
| Scenario | Deduction |
|---|---|
| Company holiday party | 100% |
| Employee picnic (all employees) | 100% |
| Treated as W-2 compensation | 100% |
| Sold to public | 100% |
| Charity fundraiser | 100% |
0% Deduction (Non-Deductible)
| Item | Reason |
|---|---|
| Entertainment | TCJA eliminated (golf, shows, etc.) |
| Office snacks/coffee | De minimis fringe (current law) |
| Personal meals | §262 personal expense |
Entertainment vs. Meals
| Entertainment | Meals (Separately Stated) |
|---|---|
| Sporting events | Hot dogs at game (separate invoice) |
| Golf outings | Dinner after golf (separate invoice) |
| Theater tickets | N/A |
| Deduction: 0% | Deduction: 50% |
The Separate Invoice Rule
| Scenario | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Baseball ticket includes food | 100% non-deductible |
| Baseball ticket + separate food invoice | Ticket 0%, food 50% |
Substantiation (The "Five Ws")
| Element | Record |
|---|---|
| Who | Name of business contact |
| What | Receipt with cost |
| When | Date |
| Where | Restaurant name |
| Why | Business purpose |
Lavish or Extravagant
| Test | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts and circumstances | No specific dollar amount |
| Reasonable for context | $300 dinner for major deal = OK |
| Unreasonable for context | $300 dinner for intern review = not OK |
Real-World Scenario
Scenario: Business owner takes client to basketball game ($200 ticket) and buys $100 of food (separately billed).
- Ticket: Entertainment = $0 deductible.
- Food: Business meal = $50 deductible (50% of $100).
- Total deduction: $50.
On the Exam
Expect 3-4 questions on meals, typically:
- Percentage Questions: "What % is deductible for client dinner?"
- Exception Questions: "What is the deduction for company party?"
- Entertainment Questions: "Are golf tickets deductible?"
The key is to remember: Meals = 50%. Entertainment = 0%. Company parties = 100%. Separate invoice matters. Office snacks = 0% (current law).
Test Your Knowledge
Basketball game $200 + $100 food (separate invoice). Deductible?
A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge
Office snacks/coffee deductibility under current law?
A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge
Company holiday party for all employees. $10,000 cost. Deductible?
A
B
C
D