No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Thursday, December 25, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Financial Planning

Northwestern Mutual files tax case amid OBBBA meal crackdown

by FeeOnlyNews.com
3 months ago
in Financial Planning
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
Northwestern Mutual files tax case amid OBBBA meal crackdown
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn



Financial advisors and tax professionals may have lots to chew on with the business owners among their clients over the latest changes to the rules for business meals.

But shifting tax statutes about noshing on the job have been causing heartburn for far longer. 

For example, in a lawsuit filed earlier this month in the Milwaukee federal court, Northwestern Mutual demanded a tax refund of more than $23 million that the giant insurer and wealth management firm argued it and thousands of employees at two corporate offices should not have paid over four years for the company’s cafeterias. The complaint traced the company’s 110-year history of providing lunch and its several tax haggles over the years about the cafeterias with the IRS.

READ MORE: The big changes to HSAs and what they mean for planning

A new normal for food at work?

The lawsuit also reflects the complexity of the many tax incentives tied in some way to eating for business purposes. The guidelines giving companies and their workers an exemption from their gross income for the cost of onsite cafeterias is remaining in place, but the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will eliminate a separate deduction for the cost of those lunchrooms starting next year. 

The 2017 tax law had cut that deduction to 50% of the cost of onsite cafeterias. However, pandemic-era legislation restored it temporarily to 100% for two years. Unless they qualify for exceptions to the new law for restaurants and the fishing and oil industries, employers that provide workers with lunch or snacks will no longer get to deduct the cost in 2026. The law will cause large companies and employers like universities and hospitals to consider reducing or dropping their onsite meals, according to Michael Chuah, the principal attorney of Paxterra Law.

“It really is targeting very specific types of companies that have this type of benefit like an employee perk,” Chuah said. “When you work in those types of environments, it is certainly possible that you’re going to lose that 50% deduction.”

But, like wealthy clients, large companies like Northwestern, LPL Financial and Coca-Cola frequently get litigious with the IRS over their tax bills. Northwestern alleged the federal government owes the firm $23,047,094 for the repayment of income, payroll and Social Security taxes, plus interest, from the years 2014-2015 and 2018-2019 based on the corporate cafeterias in its downtown Milwaukee headquarters and suburban office in Franklin, Wisconsin.

“Northwestern Mutual is just one of the many targets of a decades-long bureaucratic hostility towards Section 119’s plain language broadly excluding from gross income the value of on-campus meals furnished for the ‘convenience of the employer,’ conceded by the

Treasury Department to encompass meals furnished for any ‘substantial noncompensatory business reason,'” the complaint said.

“While Congress has consistently expanded the scope of the exclusion through multiple amendments to Section 119 over the decades since its enactment, the IRS has repeatedly resisted these Congressional affirmations of the exclusion’s broad scope, thwarting the efforts of employers across the country to invoke the protections of Section 119(a)(1),” it continued. “In 1978, these bureaucratic usurpations became so problematic that Congress was compelled to impose a moratorium on the Treasury Department’s enactment of any new regulations seeking to interpret Section 119 out of the Code, which remained in effect for five years. Institutional memories have faded, however, as the IRS has resumed its systematic thwarting of the sweeping scope of Section 119, burdening thousands of employers and millions of rank-and-file employees across the country with taxes they simply do not owe.”

Representatives for the IRS said the agency doesn’t comment on pending lawsuits. Industry news outlet Insurance Business first reported the Sept. 2 lawsuit.

READ MORE: Caps, credits, contributions: Tax planning for parents under OBBBA

Food for thought

Northwestern, which generated a record $38 billion in revenue last year, gave out its first free lunch to employees in January 1915. The company received a ruling from the IRS in 1948 enabling it to exclude its on-campus meals from gross income, and it resolved a dispute with the agency 50 years later over the deduction for those expenses in 1991 and 1992, according to the complaint. 

However, the IRS challenged the company’s use of that exemption for 2014-15 and 2018-19 and “put forward inconsistent and erroneous justifications for disallowing those claims,” according to the lawsuit.

If Coca-Cola’s ongoing case over several billions of dollars in taxes for the years 2007 to 2009 is any indication, the Northwestern case could take several years to reach a ruling or a resolution. OBBBA didn’t alter that exemption from an employee’s gross income for the cafeteria, but the vast majority of companies or other employers with a cafeteria will no longer get the 50% deduction for the expense. That doesn’t mean they’ll be completely without any tax deductions for the cost of a business meal, though.

“For businesses, tax deductions for meals and entertainment expenses are governed by a maze of rules,” according to a guide by accounting firm RSM. “Allowable deductions vary based on the context and purpose of the meals or entertainment, thus making proper treatment of such expenses a challenging area for tax compliance. In addition, the rules have changed several times over the past decade. With additional changes effective in 2026, taking a fresh look at the deductibility of these expenses may be a good idea for many employers.”

The alterations to the deduction under Section 274 and related sections of the tax code should prompt employers and their advisors to consider shifting part of the cost of work meals and whether to limit them or document them more carefully, according to a blog by Harper & Company Certified Public Accountants. But “meals provided by restaurants or catering vendors in bona fide business transactions” can still get a deduction, it noted.

“Because it changes the game for how companies budget, plan employee perks, cafeterias, staff policies. If you didn’t know this was coming, you could face big tax surprises in 2026,” the blog said. “Also, employee benefits folks will need to communicate clearly. What used to be a ‘perk’ may now come with a cost or reduced tax benefit for the company.”

While entrepreneurs will need to huddle with their advisor or CPA to get into their specific situations, they can figure out the basic criteria for whether a meal might get the deduction. The new rules distinguish between daily meals in a cafeteria and a special occasion or a specific business activity, Chuah said. The former used to qualify for a deduction, but it will no longer get it next year. But the latter kind will still receive a deduction.

“It’s kind of reverse psychology,” he said. “When you read the rule as an employer, it’s a little bit funky, because you have to figure out what is qualifying.”



Source link

Tags: CaseCrackdownfilesmealMutualNorthWesternOBBBAtax
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

ETH Sell-off Overblown, TradFi Likely To Buy The Dips

Next Post

8 Executor-Proof Steps That Make Settling an Estate Easier

Related Posts

RIAs and wirehouses eye regulatory changes in 2026

RIAs and wirehouses eye regulatory changes in 2026

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 24, 2025
0

2025 was nothing if not eventful, and financial advisors say they're expecting more of the same in 2026. With potential...

JPMorgan sues another ex-private client advisor

JPMorgan sues another ex-private client advisor

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 24, 2025
0

An industry lawyer is questioning JPMorgan's decision to file a lawsuit during the holiday week against a former private client...

Know Your Niche: advising Procter & Gamble employees

Know Your Niche: advising Procter & Gamble employees

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 24, 2025
0

For a while, the biggest professional problem Brad Morgan faced was figuring out how to get toothpaste into a tube. Processing...

Take FP’s December 2025 CE quiz for financial advisors

Take FP’s December 2025 CE quiz for financial advisors

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 24, 2025
0

Enjoy complimentary access to top ideas and insights — selected by our editors.Want unlimited access to top ideas and insights?...

‘Culture’ tops talent for RIA acquirers: DeVoe

‘Culture’ tops talent for RIA acquirers: DeVoe

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 23, 2025
0

For advisors hoping their practice will be bought by a larger firm, sheer talent is no longer enough.Processing ContentRIA acquirers...

Investment trends that helped shape 2025

Investment trends that helped shape 2025

by FeeOnlyNews.com
December 23, 2025
0

Enjoy complimentary access to top ideas and insights — selected by our editors.Want unlimited access to top ideas and insights?...

Next Post
8 Executor-Proof Steps That Make Settling an Estate Easier

8 Executor-Proof Steps That Make Settling an Estate Easier

Can Lyft Stock Take Out  in 2025 as Lyft Snags Waymo Partnership?

Can Lyft Stock Take Out $24 in 2025 as Lyft Snags Waymo Partnership?

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
EBRI: 401(k) loans serve as health and housing lifeline

EBRI: 401(k) loans serve as health and housing lifeline

December 16, 2025
What is a credit card spending limit — and what to know

What is a credit card spending limit — and what to know

August 4, 2025
Links 12/10/2025 | naked capitalism

Links 12/10/2025 | naked capitalism

December 10, 2025
BAT to offload ITC Hotels shares worth Rs 2,948 crore via a block deal

BAT to offload ITC Hotels shares worth Rs 2,948 crore via a block deal

December 4, 2025
5 Senior Discounts Being Eliminated by National Retailers

5 Senior Discounts Being Eliminated by National Retailers

December 7, 2025
AT&T promised the government it won’t pursue DEI

AT&T promised the government it won’t pursue DEI

December 4, 2025
10 Senior‑Friendly Ways To Cut Energy Bills in Snowstorms

10 Senior‑Friendly Ways To Cut Energy Bills in Snowstorms

0
Dickens the Man | Mises Institute

Dickens the Man | Mises Institute

0
Gen Z founder on ‘AI anxiety’ and being pigeonholed as generation shortcut: ‘biggest misconception’

Gen Z founder on ‘AI anxiety’ and being pigeonholed as generation shortcut: ‘biggest misconception’

0
10 tokens that defined 2025 wildest trades

10 tokens that defined 2025 wildest trades

0
Keystone obtains NIS 1.75b finance for Egged from Leumi

Keystone obtains NIS 1.75b finance for Egged from Leumi

0
5 Things to Buy on Dec. 26 for As Much As 70% Off

5 Things to Buy on Dec. 26 for As Much As 70% Off

0
10 tokens that defined 2025 wildest trades

10 tokens that defined 2025 wildest trades

December 25, 2025
Keystone obtains NIS 1.75b finance for Egged from Leumi

Keystone obtains NIS 1.75b finance for Egged from Leumi

December 25, 2025
7 traits of deeply kind souls who struggle to keep close friendships

7 traits of deeply kind souls who struggle to keep close friendships

December 25, 2025
5 Social Security Add‑On Benefits Most Older Adults Don’t Know They Qualify For

5 Social Security Add‑On Benefits Most Older Adults Don’t Know They Qualify For

December 25, 2025
Market sentiment broadly mixed this week, shows latest AAII survey (SP500:)

Market sentiment broadly mixed this week, shows latest AAII survey (SP500:)

December 25, 2025
Louisville Seniors Are Seeing Higher Cold‑Weather Firewood Costs

Louisville Seniors Are Seeing Higher Cold‑Weather Firewood Costs

December 25, 2025
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • 10 tokens that defined 2025 wildest trades
  • Keystone obtains NIS 1.75b finance for Egged from Leumi
  • 7 traits of deeply kind souls who struggle to keep close friendships
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.