Trivial Benefits vs Other Employee Perks: What’s Best for Small Companies?

Comparison of trivial benefits and employee perks in a business.

Table of Contents

Trivial Benefits or Employee Perks? Choose smartly.

A guide for small businesses deciding how best to reward employees while keeping costs and compliance under control.

For small companies, choosing between trivial benefits and other perks is about balancing employee happiness, cost, and compliance. Here’s a breakdown of which option may be best for you.

Introduction

Attracting and retaining employees requires more than just a salary.
Small businesses must be smart about what they offer — and how they offer it — without breaking the bank or creating tax complications.

What Are Trivial Benefits?

Small, non-cash gifts provided by the company, such as:

  • £50 Amazon vouchers
  • Birthday meals
  • Festive gifts

Tax-free if under £50, not performance-linked, and company-paid directly.

What Are Traditional Employee Perks?

Larger or ongoing benefits provided to staff, examples include:

  • Health insurance
  • Gym memberships
  • Company cars
  • Paid training and development

Generally taxed as a benefit in kind unless specifically exempt.

Comparing Trivial Benefits and Perks

Feature

Trivial Benefits

Traditional Perks

Cost

Low (under £50 per benefit)

Medium–High

Tax Treatment

Tax-free if compliant

Often taxable (benefit in kind)

Admin Burden

Very low

Higher (P11D, Class 1A NIC)

Flexibility

Very flexible

Often contractual or ongoing

Morale Boost

Immediate, short-term

Longer-term engagement

When to Use Trivial Benefits

  • Budget-conscious appreciation
  • Frequent small morale boosts
  • Celebrating life events (birthdays, milestones)
  • Quick, easy, compliant rewards

When to Offer Larger Employee Perks

  • Building long-term staff loyalty
  • Supporting health, wellbeing, and work-life balance

Differentiating your company in competitive hiring markets

FAQs on Benefits and Perks

1. Can we use both trivial benefits and employee perks?

Absolutely — many companies combine them smartly.

They boost short-term morale, but longer-term perks may be needed for retention over time.

Cost-effective morale boosts without tax complications. You can read more on trivial benefits in the guide by HMRC here.

Final Thoughts

Small businesses don’t have to choose one or the other.
Used wisely, trivial benefits offer regular touchpoints of appreciation, while larger perks help build deep loyalty over the long term.

The smart approach is knowing when and how to use each option to your advantage.

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