Man Utd is cutting staff perks. Should, and can, you?
Manchester United FC is to end free hot meals for its staff as part of a cost-cutting exercise. If you want to withdraw staff perks such as free food, tea and coffee to save on business costs, can you do so?
If any of the perks are contractual entitlements, then you will only be able to withdraw them with explicit employee consent. Otherwise, without consent, you will be in breach of contract. Check the terms of employment contracts and staff handbooks carefully. If any perks are contractual, seek employee consent through a process of consultation and negotiation. Employees are likely to be more understanding and give their consent if they see your proposal as necessary for business survival or job security. A compromise here might be to reduce perk frequency, or to replace them with lower-cost alternatives, rather than removing them altogether.
If the perks are not a contractual right but rather you provide them entirely on a discretionary basis, which is likely to be the case at least with free tea and coffee, you should be able to withdraw them without consent. However, as staff may have come to rely on these perks, to avoid breaching the implied term of trust and confidence and to preserve good employee relations, it’s advisable to still consult with staff about your proposals, being honest about the business reasons why you need to cut costs, how you are hoping to achieve this and when your proposal will be implemented, giving adequate notice of the change.
Also be aware that, depending on the circumstances, a discretionary benefit can harden into a contractual entitlement, through custom and practice, if it has been provided consistently over time. So, even if a perk is discretionary, it may now, in fact, have become part of the employee’s terms and conditions of employment.
Related Topics
-
What concessions can help your business?
HMRC has been taking away a number of VAT concessions that have existed for many years. Why has this happened and what concessions could still be useful for your business?
-
MONTHLY FOCUS: PROVIDING FURTHER TAX-FREE BENEFITS TO EMPLOYEES
In this further examination of tax and NI free benefits. Providing benefits that are exempt from income tax is a great way to reward employees in a tax-efficient way. Which benefits qualify for tax-free treatment?
-
HMRC urges agents to review excepted estates
HMRC is reminding tax agents to review inheritance tax (IHT) returns submitted for excepted estates following changes introduced from 1 January 2025. The warning follows concerns that some estates may have been incorrectly treated under the new rules. What should you check?









This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.