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NRG5
Level 1

Won a Car from Raffle in 2020

Thanks in advance. Won a car last year on a raffle. Paid all the taxes when we picked it up from the dealer. When i did my taxes i entered the all info from the W-2G.

We also sold a little stock in my co. but it was under 3k.

 

End result -- still owe $ to Fed and esp. to sate. This is surprising since we got a positive refund last year. Did something big change? Seems like we're paying more taxes on the car that we should. 

 

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Accepted Solutions
BillM223
Expert Alumni

Won a Car from Raffle in 2020

"Paid all the taxes when we picked it up from the dealer." You actually aren't paying taxes on the gain at this point - all you are doing is setting aside dollars to be applied to your tax at the end of the year when you do your return.

 

This is because no one knows at the point when you pick the car up how much tax you will owe on this car. The tax you owe is your margin tax rate times the net value of the prize. I don't imagine that this was discussed when you picked up the car.

 

For example, the W-2G might have had a standard 20% withheld on the prize. However, if you are in the 22% tax bracket, then (within limits), you would owe at the end of the year an additional 2% of the value of the car (22%-20%). Of course, you might not have been that close.

 

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1 Reply
BillM223
Expert Alumni

Won a Car from Raffle in 2020

"Paid all the taxes when we picked it up from the dealer." You actually aren't paying taxes on the gain at this point - all you are doing is setting aside dollars to be applied to your tax at the end of the year when you do your return.

 

This is because no one knows at the point when you pick the car up how much tax you will owe on this car. The tax you owe is your margin tax rate times the net value of the prize. I don't imagine that this was discussed when you picked up the car.

 

For example, the W-2G might have had a standard 20% withheld on the prize. However, if you are in the 22% tax bracket, then (within limits), you would owe at the end of the year an additional 2% of the value of the car (22%-20%). Of course, you might not have been that close.

 

See how that works?

**Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"

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