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🧾 Meal vouchers for one-person companies in Belgium: benefits & how to encode them in Accountable

This article explains who can use meal vouchers, what the 2026 rules and amounts are, and how to correctly encode a Monizze invoice in Accountable for one-person companies (BV/SRL).

Written by Mohaned

Just subscribed to meal vouchers for your company and want to encode everything correctly in Accountable? We walk you through it step by step. 😊

ℹ️ This article is for one-person companies (BV/SRL) only. Self-employed natural persons (eenmanszaak / indépendant en personne physique) cannot deduct meal vouchers as a professional expense.


💡 Who can use meal vouchers?

Meal vouchers are a tax-efficient way to supplement your remuneration as a company director, and they are only available to one-person companies (BV/SRL).

⚠️ If you operate as a self-employed natural person and accidentally paid a Monizze invoice, do not encode it as a professional expense. Simply classify the bank transaction as a personal payment in Accountable.

⚠️ If you have employees, you must grant them meal vouchers of the same value.


💰 What are the benefits?

As an employee (company director):

  • Up to €196.20 net per month (based on 20 working days at €10/day, minus €1.09 personal contribution)

  • Up to €1,960 net per year (based on 220 working days)

  • Fully exempt from personal income tax

  • No social security contributions due

As an employer (your company):

  • No employer contributions on the voucher amount

  • No social charges

  • Up to 3x cheaper than an equivalent salary increase

  • €4 per voucher deductible as a business cost (only when applying the maximum employer contribution of €8.91)


📌 Practical rules (as of 1 January 2026)

  • Maximum €10.00 per working day (previously €8.00)

  • Employer pays a maximum of €8.91 per voucher (previously €6.91)

  • Employee contribution: minimum €1.09 per voucher (unchanged)

  • Must be issued via an approved provider (Sodexo, Edenred, Monizze)

💡 Good to know: You are not required to go up to €10. You can continue at €8 if you prefer, but you will then only get €2 of tax deductibility per voucher instead of €4.


🔍 What does a Monizze invoice look like?

A Monizze invoice typically contains two separate cost components:

  • The meal voucher value itself: e.g. 20 vouchers x €8.91 (employer part), at 0% VAT

  • Admin fees on meal vouchers: the management cost charged by Monizze, at 21% VAT

These two components must be encoded as separate expense lines in Accountable.


👉 How to split the invoice in Accountable

When adding a Monizze expense, create two Items:

Item 1: Meal vouchers

  • Category: Meal vouchers (chèques-repas / maaltijdcheques)

  • Amount: number of vouchers x employer contribution (e.g. 20 x €8.91 = €178.20)

  • VAT: 0% -> Item is exempt from VAT

Item 2: Administrative fees

  • Category: Admin fees on meal vouchers

  • Amount: Monizze services fees as shown on the invoice, VAT included

  • VAT: 21% (deductible)


⚠️ What if there is still a remaining amount to link?

After linking your bank transaction to the expense, Accountable may show a remaining balance to link. This is normal.

It happens when the total bank payment is higher than the total of the two encoded expense lines. You can safely ignore this message as long as both lines are correctly encoded.


📋 Encoding recap

Expense line

Category

VAT

Meal vouchers (employer part)

Meal vouchers

0%

Admin fees on meal vouchers

Monizze services fees

21% deductible

Remaining balance to link

N/A

Can be ignored

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