logo
Trump tax law quietly takes aim at popular perk: office snacks

Trump tax law quietly takes aim at popular perk: office snacks

Miami Herald15-07-2025
The SkinnyPop in the break room may not last. Donald Trump is targeting the office snack.
The president's signature tax law allows a long-standing business deduction for the cost of food provided to employees to expire, imperiling a workplace perk popularized during Silicon Valley's dot-com boom that is now an emblem of modern office culture. A well-stocked pantry is now a staple at Wall Street banks, among other places.
US companies that continue to provide office snacks, coffee or on-site lunches will see them taxed after Dec. 31, when the deduction will be eliminated.
The tax change gained little attention as the sprawling, nearly 1,000-page legislation moved through Congress and it isn't yet clear how companies will respond.
A spokesperson for Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which provides employees $30 stipends for "out of hours" meals and a pantry stocked with complementary coffee and snacks, declined to comment on what the company will do when the tax deduction ends. So did a spokesperson for Meta Platforms Inc., another company known for employees' ready access to free food and coffee. Spokespeople for for Alphabet Inc.'s Google didn't respond to requests for comment.
Far from Wall Street and Silicon Valley, Alaska's fishing industry was spared from higher-cost noshes. The state's fishermen earned a carve-out in a bid to keep Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski's support for the overall bill, which squeaked by only with Vice President JD Vance casting a tie-breaking vote.
No such luck for Maine's lobstermen, whose senator, Republican Susan Collins, didn't vote for the legislation.
Restaurants will also be able to deduct the cost of employee meals, a long-standing tradition for kitchen and wait staff. But that will no longer be the case for most other employers, including factories and hospitals, many of which also offer workers free or subsidized meals or snacks.
Eliminating the deduction is projected to raise $32 billion in additional taxes on employers through 2034, according to Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation.
Free food has become broadly entrenched in workplaces, with 44% of US employers now providing free snacks, double the rate a decade ago, according to surveys conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management.
Free office pantries and cafes have been celebrated in recent decades for encouraging employees to work longer hours, boosting morale and sparking creative collaboration through chance encounters. Google co-founder Sergey Brin has been widely quoted as instructing his office designers to assure no employee was more than 200 feet away from food.
Trump's 2017 tax law halved the deduction for employer-provided food and scheduled it for elimination at the end of this year, as the administration sought to lower that law's budget impact when a host of breaks expired Dec. 31. The new tax legislation Trump signed on July 4 rolled back most of the year-end scheduled tax increases but maintained elimination of office snack-deduction, except for the Alaska and restaurant carveouts.
Still, Ali Sabeti, chief executive officer of ZeroCater Inc., a San Francisco-based corporate catering company whose more than 1,000 clients include major banks and tech companies such as Roku Inc. - said he doesn't expect to lose business as a result.
The catering company didn't lose clients in 2017, when the deduction was reduced to 50%, he said.
"It's pretty inelastic," Sabeti said. "When you take a tax deduction away, the cost is going to go up, but companies will continue to spend, just like if you took away a deduction on a laptop."
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian Missile and Drone Attack Pummels Kyiv, Killing at Least 6
Russian Missile and Drone Attack Pummels Kyiv, Killing at Least 6

New York Times

timea minute ago

  • New York Times

Russian Missile and Drone Attack Pummels Kyiv, Killing at Least 6

Russia bombarded the Ukrainian capital with a furious missile and drone attack before dawn on Thursday, killing at least six civilians in an assault that came soon after President Trump had warned Moscow of new sanctions if such violence persisted. Rescuers raced to more than two dozen locations around the capital, Kyiv, to put out fires and search for survivors in the rubble of blasted apartment buildings. 'We have 52 injured, nearly 30 hospitalized,' Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the city's military administration, said in a statement at 7 a.m. local time. 'Among them, nine children were injured.' One child was among the deceased. The number of dead and wounded was likely to grow, Mr. Tkachenko warned. The assault came shortly after President Trump threatened new sanctions on Moscow if President Vladimir V. Putin did not put a halt to the bloodshed in 10 days. Russian officials dismissed the warning, and many in Kyiv saw the bombardment as Mr. Putin's way of thumbing his nose at the United States. The bombardment began around midnight with swarms of drones packed with explosives descending on the city from multiple directions. Tracer fire from heavy machine guns lit up the sky as air defense crews struggled to keep up with the barrage. Drones exploded over city streets as residents raced to find shelter wherever they could. At 3:20 a.m., the Air Force issued an all-clear signal, but the threat quickly resumed at approximately 4:30 a.m. This time, the threat came from ballistic missiles. The sky lit up as they slammed into the city center, with one striking a nine-story apartment building. At least 27 locations around Kyiv were hit in either direct strikes or by falling debris, mainly in the city's Solomianskyi district, the authorities said. President Volodymyr Zelensky shared video footage of one residential building reduced to ruins. 'People are under the rubble,' he wrote. 'All services are on site. Russian terrorists.'

Shell Earnings Fall as Its Oil Traders Struggle With Volatility
Shell Earnings Fall as Its Oil Traders Struggle With Volatility

Bloomberg

timea minute ago

  • Bloomberg

Shell Earnings Fall as Its Oil Traders Struggle With Volatility

Shell Plc profit slumped 32% in the second quarter as prices retreated and its oil and gas traders struggled to navigate wild market swings driven by unpredictable newsflow. Europe's largest energy major faced whipsawing markets in the three months ended June, from US President Donald Trump's escalating trade war to OPEC+'s shock decision to accelerate production increases, capped by the brief war in the Middle East. Crude prices ultimately ended the quarter about 10% lower.

Taiwan Near Consensus With US on Trade Ahead of Trump's Deadline
Taiwan Near Consensus With US on Trade Ahead of Trump's Deadline

Bloomberg

timea minute ago

  • Bloomberg

Taiwan Near Consensus With US on Trade Ahead of Trump's Deadline

Taiwan said its negotiators are drafting a joint statement with the US on their bilateral trade deal, appearing to make some long-awaited progress just a day ahead of Donald Trump's tariff deadline. 'Technical negotiations have been completed, and both sides have reached a certain degree of consensus on issues including tariffs, non-tariff trade barriers, trade facilitation, supply chain resilience, and economic security,' Cabinet spokesperson Michelle Lee said at a briefing on Thursday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store