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Sports betting - Bet, payout, profit and taxability question

How are winnings calculated and what is reported to the IRS?

 

Example.  (I know threshold #'s are higher for reporting, just using these as easy calculation examples)

1)  You bet $100 on a game and win $50.  The payout is $150 ($100 original wager + $50 win/profit).  In this scenario the true profit is $50.  What is reported to IRS, is it the total payout ($150) or just the win/profit ($50)?

 

2) Regarding the $600 or 300:1 win to bet ratio that triggers a W2 from casino/online book.....is that on one single bet, or a total of daily bet or summarized for the whole year?

 

Thanks

 

 

 

 

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3 Replies
KrisD15
Expert Alumni

Sports betting - Bet, payout, profit and taxability question

1. Usually a casino/ online betting site reports the cash they gave you. So the payout, NOT the profit.

2. Depends. 

If you walk in to a casino, wonder around playing slots and win 1,000 ten dollars at a time, nothing will be reported. 

If you get a casino account and stick the card into the slot machine before you play and win 1,000 ten dollars at a time, the casino will report it. 

If you win 1,000 playing cards, the casino will be aware when you cash in your chips and report the winnings. 

 

For online sport betting, it would be the same as the person that puts a card in the slot machine. If the bets are all made from the same account, they will summarize for the year. 

 

This is what they should do, not necessary what they do do. 

 

When you have reportable winnings, you can offset with the cost and your losses for the year (up to the amount of winnings) you can't show a loss (unless you are a professional gambler and file Schedule C)  

 

ONE MORE THING, if you do report gambling costs to offset the winnings, you can only do that if you Itemize Deductions. If use the Standard Deduction, the winnings will be reported, but none of the cost/losses.  

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Sports betting - Bet, payout, profit and taxability question

So in this case it's based on total payout, even though I truly only profited $50 on a $100 bet so I'm taxed at $150 which means I'm being taxed on my own initial wager as well.  So, to account for it and only pay on the actual $50 profit I need to itemize.  However, if itemizing is not more than my standard deduction, I still end up paying more? 

Vanessa A
Expert Alumni

Sports betting - Bet, payout, profit and taxability question

Yes.  You are correct.  This is the way the current code is written. 

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