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Why Every Small Business Needs a Staff Expenses Policy (And Most Don’t Have One)

If you run a small business, chances are your approach to staff expenses looks something like this: someone submits a receipt, you approve it, the bookkeeper codes it, and everyone moves on. It works, until it doesn’t.

The truth is, most small businesses operate without a formal expenses policy. It feels like overkill when you only have a handful of employees. But the absence of one creates problems that are slow to appear and surprisingly costly to fix. Here are five reasons why putting a policy in place is one of the simplest, highest-value things you can do for your business.


1. It Protects the Business From Financial Leakage

Without clear boundaries, expenses can creep well beyond what’s reasonable and not necessarily because staff are dishonest. More often, it’s because nobody has told them where the line is.

Should they book business class on a three-hour flight? Is a £60 team dinner claimable? What about a home office chair? When there’s no policy, these questions get answered differently every time, often in the employee’s favour. Over months and years, that ambiguity quietly drains cash; and small businesses with tighter margins and less financial buffer are the ones who can least afford it.

A policy doesn’t require you to be mean-spirited. It just defines what’s claimable, sets sensible spending limits, and makes the rules the same for everyone.


2. It Removes Ambiguity and Awkward Conversations

Without a policy, every expense claim becomes a judgement call. That puts managers in an uncomfortable position – either approving things they shouldn’t, or having conversations that feel personal and confrontational.

The same claim might get approved for one person and queried for another, which breeds resentment. Staff feel uncertain about what they can spend, so they either under-claim (and feel out of pocket) or over-claim (and create a problem). Neither is a good outcome.

A written policy removes the grey areas. When a claim falls outside it, the policy handles the conversation and not the manager’s discretion. That’s better for everyone including the employee.


3. It Keeps HMRC Onside

Staff expenses aren’t just an internal matter. They have real tax and National Insurance implications, and the rules are more nuanced than most small business owners realise.

Some reimbursements are entirely exempt from tax. Others need to be reported. Some can be covered by a PAYE settlement agreement, others trigger a benefit-in-kind. Mileage has approved rates. Subsistence has benchmarks. And without receipts, some reimbursements simply can’t be evidenced if HMRC comes knocking.

A policy that aligns with HMRC guidelines and requires the right documentation means you’re not inadvertently creating a tax liability for the business or, worse, for your employees personally. Getting this wrong can be expensive and can seriously damage trust within your team.


4. It Supports Cleaner Bookkeeping and a Faster Month-End

Ask any bookkeeper what their least favourite part of the job is and expenses will feature prominently. Chasing missing receipts. Decoding vague descriptions. Correcting miscoded claims. Unpicking a three-month backlog because someone submitted expenses late.

All of this takes time and therefore money that a small business shouldn’t be spending unnecessarily.

A clear policy sets out exactly what documentation is required, how and when claims should be submitted, and what happens if they’re not. That consistency makes the whole process faster and your accounts more accurate. It also means your bookkeeper or finance team can close the month end without being held up by avoidable admin.


5. It Sets the Right Culture From the Start

Small businesses thrive on trust and informality. That’s one of their great strengths. But it can also mean financial controls get de-prioritised until something goes wrong and by then bad habits are entrenched and the fix is harder.

Introducing an expenses policy early sends a quiet but important signal: this business is well-run, it takes its finances seriously, and it treats all staff fairly and consistently. It doesn’t need to be bureaucratic or heavy-handed. A straightforward, clearly written document is enough.

And critically, it scales with you. If you put a policy in place when you have five employees, adapting it as you grow to twenty or fifty is straightforward. If you wait until you’re bigger, you’re retrofitting a control framework onto an organisation that’s already developed habits around the absence of one. That’s a much harder job.


Where to Start

A staff expenses policy doesn’t need to be complex. At a minimum, it should cover:

  • What types of expenses are claimable (and what aren’t)
  • Spending limits by category
  • What documentation is required (receipts, descriptions, approval)
  • How and when to submit claims
  • How quickly reimbursement will be made
  • Mileage rates (aligned to HMRC approved rates)
  • Any specific rules around travel, subsistence, and entertaining

If you’re not sure where to start or you want to make sure your policy is properly aligned with HMRC requirements, it’s worth getting a finance professional involved. A little time invested now can save a significant amount of money, admin, and awkwardness later.


Cloud IT Bookkeeping provides bookkeeping and finance services to small businesses across the UK. If you’d like help reviewing your current expenses process or putting a policy in place, get in touch.