—Generous in Gainesville
Publication 15-B defines when a fringe benefit must be treated as taxable income. The value of a fringe benefit must be added to an employee’s pay and is subject to withholding. While certain fringe benefits (such as a holiday ham or fruit basket) might be considered “de minimus” and thus non-taxable, monetary gifts are never considered de minimus.
On the legal side, Joe Adams of Becker & Poliakoff, P.A., Naples/Fort Myers, states that there is no legal prohibition against a voluntary bonus program of this type, and he commonly sees similar arrangements in the associations he represents.
Adams does recommend that the amount of individual owner contributions be kept confidential from the employees. Adams says: “You don’t want to have a single owner giving large sums for employee gifts and creating the expectation, whether intended or not, that this owner should get some “extra services” from association employees in exchange for their generosity.”
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