A Tax Change Only an Accountant Could Love
If your firm runs on catered lunches, Costco snacks and late‑night pizza during busy season, brace yourself. Thanks to a delayed provision of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), expenses for employer‑operated cafeterias and meals provided for the convenience of the employer will go from 50 % deductible to totally nondeductible on January 1, 2026. Think of it as Congress’s way of saying, “We see your bagels—now pay for them yourselves.”
What’s Changing?
Under current law (since 2018), an employer can deduct only 50 % of the cost of operating an on‑site eating facility that qualifies as a de minimis fringe benefit. To qualify, the cafeteria must be located on or near the business premises, its revenue must equal or exceed its direct operating costs, and it can’t discriminate in favor of highly compensated employees. When these conditions are met, the value of meals is excludable from employees’ income under IRC § 119 (meals furnished for the convenience of the employer), and the employer currently gets a 50 % deduction.
That all changes for amounts paid or incurred after December 31, 2025. IRC § 274(o) will disallow any deduction for:
- The cost of running an employer‑operated eating facility that meets the de minimis fringe rules.
- Food or beverage expenses associated with that facility.
- Meals provided on the business premises for the convenience of the employer.
So the tax break for staff cafeterias and those “let’s order in and keep going” nights? Gone. The deduction drops from 50 % to zero, regardless of when your fiscal year ends.
New Exceptions (But Not for Most Firms)
Recent legislation softens the blow—but only for a few industries. One exception allows a deduction when the employer sells meals in bona fide transactions for full fair market value, meaning restaurants and other businesses that sell food to paying customers can still deduct the cost of feeding on‑shift employees. There’s also a narrow exception for food or beverages provided on certain fishing vessels, fish‑processing facilities and offshore oil rigs. Unless your accounting firm moonlights as a café or a cannery, these carve‑outs won’t apply.
Giving Firms Credit Where It’s Due

Will this make firm owners stop buying lunch? Not likely. Experienced partners know it’s hard to finish a 12‑hour day on an empty stomach, and the morale boost of a shared meal is worth more than the tax deduction. Expect to see the same bagels and burritos in the break room—you’ll just bear the full cost after 2025.
What You Should Do
- Budget for the full cost. Through the end of 2025, you still get a 50 % write‑off for qualifying cafeteria costs. After that, those meals reduce taxable income by nothing, so plan accordingly.
- Consider alternatives. Reimbursing employees for meals they buy while traveling or meeting clients remains 50 % deductible. Gift cards or small bonuses can replace the goodwill of free lunches without triggering the § 274(o) disallowance.
- Confirm if you qualify for an exception. If your business sells food to the public or operates a qualifying fishing or offshore facility, you may still deduct those meals. Everyone else should prepare for the deduction to disappear.
- Keep feeding your team. Remember, the law doesn’t forbid providing food—it just kills the tax deduction. Your people will still need coffee and carb‑loads during busy season; you’ll just treat it as a straight business expense.
Final Bite
This isn’t the end of free lunch; it’s the end of the tax deduction for free lunch. You’ve got a little over a year of 50 % deductibility left, so enjoy it. Starting January 1, 2026, plan on treating staff meals as a pure cost of doing business. In the meantime, watch for further guidance—Congress could always decide to tweak the rules again, but nothing broader than the current carve‑outs is on the table at the moment.









