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Started By
Message
BBB may hurt public gambling
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:46 am
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:46 am
LINK
Some people are calling it a doomsday for gambling sites. Looks like greedy politicians trying to suck every dime out of everybody they can
Some people are calling it a doomsday for gambling sites. Looks like greedy politicians trying to suck every dime out of everybody they can
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:51 am to Schleynole
quote:
If a gambler has $101,000 of taxable winnings and $100,000 of losses plus expenses during a year, their net winnings would be only $1,000. However, with only $90,000 of losses and expenses able to be deducted, their taxes would be based on winnings of $11,000. If taxed at 24% — the federal withholding rate for gambling taxes — that would lead to a tax bill of $2,640, or well over double the net winnings figure.
The exact tax rate a bettor pays on their gambling winnings depends partly on their other income, but even at the lowest tax bracket, a bettor with $101,000 of winnings and $100,000 of losses — roughly equivalent to hitting on bets priced at -110 53% of the time — would be making a loss after taxes.
This would affect professional gamblers in a huge way, but they're a very small % of the field. The vast majority have no winnings or taxable income.
This reminds me of the "more rake is better" argument from PokerStars and their prime ambassador, which led to this historic Super High Roller Bowl moment:

Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:54 am to udtiger
It makes little sense to tax the people who are good at gambling, because it just opens the field to being dominated more by degens, which is worse for the degens in the long run. At least in poker their economy is among the players, but this is going to have the house win more and take more from these degens.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:55 am to Schleynole
My unpopular opinion is that gambling and pornography should go back to being a pariah.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:56 am to anc
quote:
My unpopular opinion is that gambling and pornography should go back to being a pariah.
I default to freedom, me.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:57 am to Schleynole
Gambling income has always been the worst type of income you could have. I know someone who had $10k in 1099 winnings from slots and had to pay taxes on all of it even though she had a net loss for the year. Losses can only be deducted if you file itemized and she didn’t qualify.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 7:58 am to slackster
Yeah it was kind of a PITA to track my daily grind back in the day because I was playing live cash mostly. Much easier to do online where they track your play for you.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:15 am to SlowFlowPro
On its own, the BBB tax rules are not good. Sharps are how books set the lines, no professional bettors = worse lines for everyone. Books will have to price their lines more risk averse (i.e. shittier lines for bettors) without Sharp data
Its the individual state taxes that really kill it for the people betting for fun. Some states are even doing taxes per wager. Who is going to place a few bucks on a parlay if they are paying a 10% tax upfront?
Its the individual state taxes that really kill it for the people betting for fun. Some states are even doing taxes per wager. Who is going to place a few bucks on a parlay if they are paying a 10% tax upfront?
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:23 am to GeauxBurrow312
quote:
no professional bettors = worse lines for everyone. Books will have to price their lines more risk averse (i.e. shittier lines for bettors) without Sharp data
Correct.
I was kind of referencing this in my earlier post without getting too technical.
It's going to create more instability and over the long term the books are going to benefit from that. Your casuals are not going to know that they're getting bad lines and this instability will let the books create many more bad lines
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:23 am to Schleynole
Affects professional gamblers, not even a profession nor a system to boast about to encourage suckers to join in.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:24 am to SlowFlowPro
quote:
gambling and pornography should go back to being a pariah.
Porn is a cancer and while I don’t think it should be banned, it needs to be legally limited and publicly discouraged outside of government.
Gambling will occur legal or not and trying to suppress or stop it is silly and anti-American. However not all gambling is the same. Horse handicapping is my part time job and it’s a lot of work. I’d estimate 10 to 15 hours a week handicapping cards to maybe find a handful of races that warrant a wager. It’s a lot of math and spreadsheet building. That being said I love every second of it.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:28 am to Schleynole
This will not impact about 99.5% of people who post on here.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:34 am to Schleynole
I'm a NO vote. I won $20 at L'Auberge last Saturday. I'll die on this hill.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:48 am to Hayekian serf
Same here. Horse racing has been my primary income for over 25 years and spend as much time as you capping etc. but only if you hit a 1099 hit will it be known to govt. but the ADW track records. But may have wager at OTBs more now. Then only have to worry about huge hits on pick 6 etc bets
Posted on 7/2/25 at 8:55 am to SlowFlowPro
quote:
but even at the lowest tax bracket, a bettor with $101,000 of winnings and $100,000 of losses — roughly equivalent to hitting on bets priced at -110 53% of the time — would be making a loss after taxes.
If you’re in the lowest tax bracket and have risked 100k gambling in a year you have a major problem.
Posted on 7/2/25 at 9:00 am to deltaland
quote:
If you’re in the lowest tax bracket and have risked 100k gambling in a year you have a major problem.
Those numbers are misleading.
You could play a $10 a hand poker game and never be more than a couple hundred up or down and run up cumulative bets of a few thousand over a few hours, just giving the money back and forth mostly.
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