Deductible Business Meals & Entertainment in 2026
Business meals and entertainment get tougher to deduct starting in 2026. The recent tax law change (often called OBBBA) tightens the rules on both what you can deduct and at what percentage.
Big picture for 2026
Business meeting meals are still partly deductible
Meals are still 50% deductible if the taxpayer or their employee is present, and food/beverage is provided to a current or potential client, customer, consultant, or similar business contact.
Travel meals are still partly deductible
Travel meals remain one of the main categories where a deduction is allowed:
Employee parties and similar events stay fully deductible
There is a favorable exception for employee moral events:
Common examples:
Meals that are part of what you sell
If your business sells food or beverages to customers, the rules are better:
This change is aimed at “perk” meals for employees, not at businesses whose very product is food or beverage.
A narrow industry exception
Congress created a special rule for a very specific industry:
For most businesses, this exception will not apply, but it is very valuable for those that qualify.
Entertainment expenses in 2026
Client entertainment is still not deductible
The rules that disallowed most entertainment expenses a few years ago are still in place and were not relaxed by the latest law:
There is no return of the old “50% deductible entertainment” rule.
When entertainment can still be deducted
There are a few important exceptions where entertainment-type costs can still be written off:
What businesses should do now
For 2026 and beyond, the theme is simple: expect fewer tax breaks for meals and none for typical entertainment, with narrow but valuable exceptions for travel, employee events, and businesses that sell food or entertainment.
Author and a shout-out to: KWC, CPAs
