Tax Tips: Keep Your Lucky Winnings

Did you hit the raffle, score big at the casinos or win a car from your church raffle last year? If you did, you received a Form W-2G reporting your winnings — and so did the IRS.

Gambling winnings are taxable — reported on Line 21 of Form 1040. All is not lost. You can deduct your gambling losses, up to the extent of the winnings, but only if you itemize on Schedule A. If you report $5,000 in winnings, you can deduct $5,000 in losses as a miscellaneous expense. Gambling losses are deductible in full, and are not subject to the 2% of AGI limitation.

Losses from any type of wagering transaction can be deducted against winnings. If you win at the slots, your deduction is not limited to losses from slot machine play. You can deduct losses from the lottery, 50-50s, bingo, casino table games, charity raffles, horse racing, keno, etc., up to the amount of your total winnings. Keep your losing lottery, raffle and racetrack tickets for the year, and keep track of slot activity by using a player’s card. But make sure the losing racetrack tickets in your collection don’t have footprints on them.

Winnings from a “no purchase necessary” sweepstakes or contest are not gambling winnings. If you win the Publishers’ Clearing House Sweepstakes or a trip to Club Med as the 10th caller to a radio station, you must report the winnings as income, but cannot deduct gambling losses against this income.

— Robert D. Flach

Consumerist has teamed up with MainStreet.com to bring you tax tips every day between now and April 15th. This frees up Tax Cat to do more important things — like trying to claim hairball meds and catnip as business expenses.

Looking for more deductions? You’ll find tons at MainStreet.com.

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