New Zealand keeps hospitality tax simpler than most countries in one respect (a flat 15% GST with no GST-free food category) and more nuanced in another: the half-deduction rule for entertainment. For an operator whose whole trade is food and drink, knowing when a cost is fully deductible, half deductible, or a fringe benefit is the core skill. All figures below are sourced from Inland Revenue guidance in the Sources section.
The 50% entertainment rule
Inland Revenue splits entertainment into two buckets. Expenses that are completely business related are 100% deductible; expenses with a significant private element are limited to 50% deductible [1] .
The 100% bucket includes employee meals while travelling on business, food at a conference lasting four hours or more, light meals for managers during work, and entertainment that promotes the business with equal public access [1] . The 50% bucket includes social event food and drink, corporate boxes, holiday homes used for entertaining, and gifts of food and drink such as a bottle of wine to a customer [1] . For a hospitality operator, the line matters most when hosting suppliers or running a staff social: those land in the 50% bucket.
The GST adjustment
The half-deduction rule reaches into GST. Where an entertainment expense is only 50% deductible for income tax, GST can be claimed on only the deductible half, so a GST adjustment is made for the non-deductible portion, usually once a year when the income tax return is prepared [1] . That makes the entertainment line one of the few places where the income tax and GST treatments are linked rather than separate.
GST on food sales
For sales, New Zealand is refreshingly uniform: a GST-registered business charges 15% on the food and drink it sells, with no GST-free basic-food category to police [3] . Registration is compulsory once turnover passes $60,000 in a 12-month period [3] . The corollary is full input-tax recovery on the stock, packaging, and overheads used to make those taxable supplies.
Kitchen equipment and low-value assets
Espresso machines, ovens, and fit-out are capital. Assets costing less than $1,000 are low-value assets and can be deducted in full in the year of purchase; assets at or above that go into depreciation at the relevant IRD rate [2] .
Vehicles, travel, and provisional tax
Delivery vehicles use the logbook, the 25%-of-running-costs shortcut, or actual costs, with the chosen method applied consistently. Provisional tax becomes payable in instalments once residual income tax exceeds $5,000, which catches most growing hospitality businesses by their second profitable year [3] . Staff meals while travelling for an off-site job are covered by the claim business meals in New Zealand and claim travel in New Zealand guides.
Where ExpenseFlow fits
Hospitality means a constant stream of small supplier invoices. ExpenseFlow captures each receipt and supplier invoice, extracts the line detail and GST, and syncs the transaction into Xero or QuickBooks Online with the source image attached for the seven-year record-keeping window. It surfaces the line detail and the GST figures cleanly, which is exactly what your accountant needs to make the annual entertainment adjustment correctly. It does not classify a given cost as 50% or 100% entertainment for you, and it does not file your GST return or make the income tax entertainment adjustment: those are judgements left to you or your accountant. What it removes is the receipt-chasing and manual keying behind a high-volume kitchen ledger.
Common mistakes
- Claiming 100% of an entertainment cost that has a private element and is limited to 50% [1] .
- Forgetting the matching GST adjustment when an entertainment expense is half deductible [1] .
- Treating a sub-$1,000 asset as depreciable instead of claiming the immediate low-value deduction [2] .
- Leaving GST registration until after turnover has already passed $60,000 [3] .
References
Sources and references
Every figure, threshold, deadline, and regulatory rule cited in this guide is traceable to an official government publication. URLs are reproduced in full so any reader can verify the claim at source. Numbers are subject to change at each fiscal event; we re-check this list at every quarterly refresh of this guide.
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[1]
Inland Revenue · Entertainment expenses
https://www.ird.govt.nz/income-tax/income-tax-for-businesses-and-organisations/types-of-business-expenses/entertainment-expenses50% versus 100% deductibility and the GST adjustment on the limited half.
Retrieved 2026-06-15
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[2]
Inland Revenue · Claiming depreciation
https://www.ird.govt.nz/income-tax/income-tax-for-businesses-and-organisations/types-of-business-expenses/depreciation/claiming-depreciationLow-value asset threshold of $1,000 for an immediate deduction.
Retrieved 2026-06-15
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[3]
Inland Revenue · Self-employed
https://www.ird.govt.nz/roles/self-employedGST registration over $60,000 turnover; provisional tax over $5,000 residual income tax.
Retrieved 2026-06-15