Monday, June 22, 2026

Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Includes Huge Tax Hike for Pro Gamblers

One professional gambler told FOS how the legislation could turn a year with a $1 million profit into one with a $2 million loss after taxes.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Professional gamblers have been sounding the alarm about an element of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” that passed in the Senate earlier this week, saying it would effectively raise their taxes, potentially by an enormous amount. 

The specific language that has thrown gamblers, particularly in the poker community on social media, into a sense of panic was that deductions “shall be equal to 90% of the amount of such losses during such taxable year, and (B) shall be allowed only to the extent of the gains from such transactions during such taxable year.”

Currently, gamblers can deduct 100% of their losses. The margins have the potential to make a big difference.

“My interpretation of how this will change for gamblers is they are trying to take a provision out of what they did for businesses with net operating losses where they limited the NOL that you could use up to 80% of your income so you’re always going to pay tax when you make income,” Joshua Horowitz, CPA and Team Leader of the professional sports division of Withum, told Front Office Sports.

“With gamblers, they are limiting your losses to 90%, which may cause people to owe tax even in years that they have net losses.” 

One professional gambler, who spoke to FOS on the condition of anonymity, spelled out some of the math.

“If this goes through as it is written, I would basically just have to stop,” he said. “If I win $100 million and lose $99 million, that would be a great year, to have $1 million in profit! But with this bill, I would have to pay taxes on about $10 million in ‘gains’, which would turn my year into a $2 million loss.”  

Maria Konnikova, who plays poker and writes books about it, also believes the bill would hurt her earnings.

“This is absolutely horrific if you’re a professional poker player—or even someone like me, who straddles the journalism and poker worlds. It’s basically a huge in-built fee on choosing to engage in any form of gambling (poker isn’t gambling—it’s a game of skill—but I won’t get into that here! for the bill’s purposes, we’re lumping all gambling-adjacent activities together),” she told FOS.

“Imagine I have $100,000 in winnings in a year from poker and I played $200,000-worth of tournaments, for a net win of $0. In past years, I’d have zero poker income—no taxes, because I didn’t actually make a cent. Under this bill, my losses are capped at 90%. So, I can only report $90,000 in losses—and I have to pay taxes on a phantom $10,000 that I don’t actually have! I’m being charged a penalty for choosing to play to begin with. This is absolutely bonkers. For someone like me, it means I effectively have to use my earnings as a writer to subsidize playing poker. Instead of an income stream, poker becomes a liability. If the purpose of this bill is to kill poker and stop people from playing, mission accomplished. The provision hurts you whether you have a winning year or a losing year—and the poker ecosystem is unlikely to survive the change.”

It was not clear who lobbied for this provision to be included in the bill, or why. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that the new gambling tax provision would raise $1.1 billion over eight years. 

Spokespeople for FanDuel, DraftKings, and the American Gaming Association declined to comment, and White House spokespeople did not respond to a request for comment.

The bill will be voted on in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. 

Dina Titus, a Democratic Congresswoman from Nevada, wrote on X, “Buried within the BS Republican Budget bill is a provision that harms poker players and those who gamble by limiting loss deductions. I’m working on a legislative fix that fairly treats gaming losses in the tax code.” 

FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver, who competes in poker tournaments, sounded the alarm in a Tuesday post on X.

“Tax code is already punitive to poker players (you get taxed on winning years but can’t write off losing years unless you file as a pro; it’s easy to have a down year even as a good player) and Senate-passed version of OBBBA would make it considerably worse,” Silver wrote.

Chris Moneymaker, who was credited as a major factor in setting off the poker boom after he won the World Series of Poker in 2003, quipped, “Anyone hiring 50 yr old male with zero work history for last 25 years. #wouldyoulikefrieswiththat?”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Wyndham Clark Captures Second U.S. Open As Fans Turn Against Him

Clark fended off his final-round playing partner, Scottie Scheffler.

USMNT Delivers Another Ratings Win for Fox With 14.8M Viewers

The U.S. has two group-stage wins for the first time since 1930.

Serena Williams to Make Singles Return at Wimbledon

She will also play in the doubles tournament alongside her sister, Venus.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

A Conversation with WNBA Expansion Team Portland Fire’s GM Vanja Černivec

0:00

Featured Today

Why U.S. Open Host Sites Are on a 25-Year Plan

The U.S. Open has already picked out 22 future sites through 2051.
Wisconsin Badgers forward Laila Edwards, left, and defender Caroline Harvey celebrate after Edwards scored against the Minnesota Gophers in the first period in a game Saturday, February 8, 2025, at LaBahn Arena in Madison, Wisconsin.
June 15, 2026

Two Rookies Are Rewriting Women’s Hockey Stardom

Their platforms are a mutual boon for the PWHL and its players.
Ai sports slop
June 5, 2026

How Sports Became Ground Zero for AI Slop

The category is the perfect breeding ground for AI content churn.
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group A - Germany v Luxembourg - Rhein-Neckar-Arena, Sinsheim, Germany - October 10, 2025 Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann
June 4, 2026

‘Weird Corners of the World’: How to Find a World Cup Coach

National associations look for a winning record—and also hope for serendipity.
June 3, 2026

The Elite High Schools Hosting World Cup Teams

Spain, Morocco, Croatia, and Switzerland chose schools as their tournament base camps.

White Says Never Again After White House Fight: ‘I Can’t Afford It’

The MMA promotion also distanced itself from staging future events outdoors. 
Exclusive
June 10, 2026

No White House Invite Yet for NWSL Champion Gotham FC

The club was the first NWSL team to visit, in 2024.
June 12, 2026

Rain and Rants Take Over UFC Freedom 250 Press Conference

Weather and bizarre taunts disrupted the long-planned event. 
Sponsored

Midge Purce Sounds Off on the Trinity Rodman Rule

Midge Purce discusses the Rodman Rule and the future of NWSL.
June 9, 2026

Knicks, NYC Officials Spar Over MSG Watch Parties

MSG and New York mayor Zohran Mamdani issued dueling statements Tuesday.
June 8, 2026

Game 3 Tips at MSG Without Incident Despite Heavy Security

Game 3 tipped off at 8:44, right around Games 1 and 2.
June 7, 2026

Knicks, Secret Service Announce Strict Fan Rules for Trump Game

The Knicks told fans to arrive two hours early.
FILE PHOTO: U..S. President Donald Trump speaks at the site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ballroom in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 19, 2026.
June 5, 2026

How the Big Ten and SEC Found Themselves Opposing Trump

The bill is considered dead if it doesn’t pass the Senate before August.