Gambling Losses On Income Tax Return

Posted on  by 

  1. Gambling Losses New Tax Bill
  2. Claiming Gambling Losses On Taxes
  3. Tax Reform Affects Gambling Losses
  4. Federal Taxes Gambling Losses
Gambling Losses On Income Tax Return

How to Deduct Gambling Losses on a Federal Income Tax Return. By: Mark Kennan. The IRS also permits you to reduce your taxable income by the gambling losses you sustained up to your amount of gambling winnings. However, you can claim the deduction only if you itemize your income tax deductions, meaning you give up your standard deduction. Dec 20, 2019  Amount of your gambling winnings and losses. Any information provided to you on a Form W-2G. The tool is designed for taxpayers that were U.S. Citizens or resident aliens for the entire tax year for which they're inquiring. If married, the spouse must also have been a U.S. Citizen or resident alien for the entire tax year. The IRS will only let you deduct losses to the extent that you win. For instance, if you lose $3,000 on one trip to the casino and win $2,100 on another trip in the same year, you can write off $2,100 in losses to offset the $2,100 in winnings, leaving you with a total of $900 of taxable gambling income.

More Articles

If you had a successful night at the slots or poker tables, you're going to have to share some of the lucky proceeds with Uncle Sam. The Internal Revenue Service generally requires that you report your gambling winnings and losses separately when you file your taxes rather than combining the two amounts.

Record Keeping

Deductible

As you gamble during the year, you need to keep records of your winnings and losses so that you can support whatever figures you report on your taxes. The IRS permits you to use per-session recording, which means that instead of recording whether you won or lost each time you pull the slot machine, you can simply record your total for the session. Your records should include the date and type of gambling, where you gambled and if you gambled with anyone else, such as a home poker game. If you win more than $600, you should receive a Form W-2G from the casino.

Gambling Losses New Tax Bill

Taxable Winnings

When figuring your gambling winnings, only include the winnings from each session rather than using losses to offset your gains. You have to include gambling winnings even if you didn't receive a Form W-2G from the casino. For example, if you gambled six times during the year, winning $100, $3,000, $4,000 and $6,000 but losing $5,000 and $2,000, your gambling winnings for the year are $13,100. This amount gets reported on line 21 of your Form 1040 tax return.

Gambling Losses

To claim your gambling losses, you have to itemize your deductions. Gambling losses are a miscellaneous deduction, but -- unlike some other miscellaneous deductions -- you can deduct the entire loss. The deduction goes on line 28 of Schedule A and you have to note that the deduction is for gambling losses. For example, if you lost $5,000 on one occasion and $7,000 on another, your total deduction is $12,000.

Gambling Loss Limitation

You can't deduct more in gambling losses than you have in gambling winnings for the year. For example, suppose you reported $13,000 in gambling winnings on Line 21 of Form 1040. Even if you lost $100,000 that year, your gambling loss deduction is limited to $13,000. Worse, you aren't allowed to carry forward the excess, so if you had $87,000 in losses you couldn't deduct last year, you can't use that to offset the gambling income from the current year.

Video of the Day

References (2)

Photo Credits

  • tax forms image by Chad McDermott from Fotolia.com

Claiming Gambling Losses On Taxes

How to deduct gambling losses

Tax Reform Affects Gambling Losses

About the Author

Federal Taxes Gambling Losses

Based in the Kansas City area, Mike specializes in personal finance and business topics. He has been writing since 2009 and has been published by 'Quicken,' 'TurboTax,' and 'The Motley Fool.'

Coments are closed