Ohio Tax Rate On Gambling Winnings

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File Form W-2G, Certain Gambling Winnings, to report gambling winnings and any federal income tax withheld on those winnings. The requirements for reporting and withholding depend on the type of gambling, the amount of the gambling winnings, and generally the ratio of the winnings to the wager. File Form W-2G with the IRS. If gambling is your actual profession, then your gambling income is generally considered regular earned income and is taxed at your normal effective income tax rate. As a self-employed individual, you will need to report your income and expenses on Schedule C, which the eFile app will automatically generate and add to your 2020 Tax Return based.

Last summer, the Columbus city council unanimously approved an ordinance that imposes a 2.5 percent income tax on gambling winnings. The tax is effective as of June 1, 2012 and will be given retroactive application. Everyone is required to report gambling winnings over a certain amount, and in many instances casinos will take your information and issue a1099. Whether or not you pay taxes on them is dependent what your income level is.

Losses

On June 30, 2013, Ohio Governor John Kasich signed into law Amended Substitute House Bill Number 59. The 3,747 page bill sets forth the Buckeye State’s 2014-15 fiscal year budget.

But that’s not all. Tucked into the bill is the following:

Sec. 5747.01….

As used in this chapter:

(A) “Adjusted gross income” or “Ohio adjusted gross income” means federal adjusted gross income, as defined and used in the Internal Revenue Code, adjusted as provided in this section:

(29) Deduct, to the extent not otherwise deducted or excluded in computing federal or Ohio adjusted gross income for the taxable year, any loss from wagering transactions that is allowed as an itemized deduction under section 165 of the Internal Revenue Code and that the taxpayer deducted in computing federal taxable income.

Ohio Tax Rate On Gambling Winnings Slot Machines

Gambling losses are no longer deductible as an itemized deduction for purposes of the Ohio income tax, effective immediately.

Gambling losses became deductible under Ohio tax law beginning January 1, 2013, as part of legislation expanding commercial gambling in Ohio.

Ohio Tax Rate On Gambling Winnings Losses

I located one remark after a brief search for the purpose behind the repeal, in an article quoting a GOP budget fact sheet: “Why should Ohioans subsidize the risky behaviors and bad luck of others?”

I wasn’t fully satisfied, so I kept searching, and found this 2010 Columbus Dispatch op-ed that details the circumstances arising to allowing the deduction in the first place. Legislators have since been convinced otherwise, apparently.

From my reading, the repeal is retroactive. In other words, gambling losses are not deducible in Ohio in 2013 for any part of the tax year.

Ohio rejoins the list of other “bad” gambling states that do not permit gambling losses as an itemized deduction at all for income tax purposes:

Ohio Tax Rate On Gambling Winnings

Indiana Tax Rate On Gambling Winnings

  • Connecticut
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Massachusetts
  • Michigan
  • West Virginia
  • Wisconsin

This change in the law does not impact professional gamblers in Ohio, of course. Professionals may deduct gambling losses up to the extent of gambling winnings as a trade or business expense.