Longtime online / offshore bettor here (I go all the way back to English Sports Betting) who lives in Ohio.
Over the past 25 years, I've been dealing with the hassles of funding my accounts via MG, WU, cashiers checks, CC, and most recently Bitcoin.
Payouts have been just as challenging, though bitcoin has made things somewhat less of a headache.
Anyway, sportsbook wagering becomes legal in Ohio as of January 1st. I've been looking forward to this day for a LONG time, and this evening I began signing up on some of the sites which will soon offer sportsbook wagering. However, in doing so I realized the MAJOR drawback -- paying taxes on winnings. Some of these sites offer a tax calculator, which will estimate how much in taxes you should expect to dish out based on winnings. Seems like the headaches and the sending / receiving fees to and from offshore books are a bargain compared to the fees one should expect from wagering within the U.S.
Am I missing something here? So if I win $100 here, $100 there and at the end of the year my winnings add up to more than $600 I get taxed both at the federal and state level???
I mean, talk about taking a chunk out of profits that are already a struggle to win.
Other than the ease of sending / receiving funds, someone please give the the pros of wagering in the U.S. rather than offshore.
Thanks in advance!
Over the past 25 years, I've been dealing with the hassles of funding my accounts via MG, WU, cashiers checks, CC, and most recently Bitcoin.
Payouts have been just as challenging, though bitcoin has made things somewhat less of a headache.
Anyway, sportsbook wagering becomes legal in Ohio as of January 1st. I've been looking forward to this day for a LONG time, and this evening I began signing up on some of the sites which will soon offer sportsbook wagering. However, in doing so I realized the MAJOR drawback -- paying taxes on winnings. Some of these sites offer a tax calculator, which will estimate how much in taxes you should expect to dish out based on winnings. Seems like the headaches and the sending / receiving fees to and from offshore books are a bargain compared to the fees one should expect from wagering within the U.S.
Am I missing something here? So if I win $100 here, $100 there and at the end of the year my winnings add up to more than $600 I get taxed both at the federal and state level???
I mean, talk about taking a chunk out of profits that are already a struggle to win.
Other than the ease of sending / receiving funds, someone please give the the pros of wagering in the U.S. rather than offshore.
Thanks in advance!