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Lottery Tax Rates Vary Greatly By State

4 min readBy: Lyman Stone, Joseph Bishop-Henchman

Download Fiscal Fact No. 407 Lottery Tax Rates Vary Greatly By State

Introduction

With the Mega Millions jackpot reaching a record $586 million, Americans in 43 states and the District of Columbia are lining up to buy tickets for Friday’s drawing. Everyone knows that winners must choose between a lump sum payment and installment payments, but where you purchase your winning ticket also matters, due to state income and withholdingWithholding is the income an employer takes out of an employee’s paycheck and remits to the federal, state, and/or local government. It is calculated based on the amount of income earned, the taxpayer’s filing status, the number of allowances claimed, and any additional amount of the employee requests. taxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. es.

As with wage income, some amount of lottery winnings is withheld for the government before you calculate your total tax bill when filing your income tax the following year. While lottery winnings of $600 or less are not reported to the IRS, winnings in excess of $5,000 are subject to a 25 percent federal withholding tax. In other words, if one person wins the jackpot and chooses the $316 million lump sum “cash option,” $79 million will go straight to the IRS. Next April, the jackpot winner or winners can see if any of that amount gets refunded or if they owe even more.

The same is true at the state level. While lottery winnings are subject to state income tax in most states, withholding tax varies from zero (California, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and the states with no state income tax) to over 12 percent in New York City. (See Table 1, below.) Arizona and Maryland have withholding rates for non-residents, so an out-of-state winner who bought a ticket in those two states could face double withholding.

Table 1: Lottery Withholding Tax Rates by State

State

Withholding Tax Rate (%)

State

Withholding Tax Rate (%)

Alabama

No lottery

Montana

6.90%

Alaska

No lottery

Nebraska

5.00%

Arizona

5.0% (residents);

6.0% (non-residents)

Nevada

No lottery

New Hampshire

No income tax

Arkansas

7.00%

New Jersey

3.00%

California

None

New Mexico

6.00%

Colorado

4.00%

New York

8.82% (plus 3.648% for New York City or 0.897% for Yonkers)

Connecticut

6.70%

North Carolina

7.00%

Delaware

None

North Dakota

3.99%

Florida

No income tax

Ohio

4.00%

Georgia

6.00%

Oklahoma

4.00%

Hawaii

No lottery

Oregon

8.00%

Idaho

7.80%

Pennsylvania

None

Illinois

5.00%

Rhode Island

7.00%

Indiana

3.40%

South Carolina

7.00%

Iowa

5.00%

South Dakota

No income tax

Kansas

5.00%

Tennessee

No income tax

Kentucky

6.00%

Texas

No income tax

Louisiana

5.00%

Utah

No lottery

Maine

5.00%

Vermont

6.00%

Maryland

8.75% residents;

7.00% non-residents

Virginia

4.00%

Massachusetts

5.00%

Washington

No income tax

Michigan

4.35%

West Virginia

6.50%

Minnesota

7.25%

Wisconsin

7.75%

Mississippi

No lottery

Wyoming

No lottery

Missouri

4.00%

District of Columbia

8.50%

Source: US Mega

States rely heavily on lottery revenue, collecting an average of $59 per person in profit aside from any income tax collections. (See Table 2, below.) While no government labels its lottery as a tax, lottery profits are an implicit tax. After prizes have been awarded and operating costs have been covered, the remaining money is transferred to state coffers. To the extent this revenue is used for general government purposes, it is a tax. Further, because state lotteries pay out an average of only 60 percent of gross revenues in prizes (compared to about 90 percent for casino slot machines or table games), state-run lotteries are only viable as a monopoly, in conjunction with a ban on private lotteries.

Some argue that while it is a tax, it is a voluntary one since the revenue is handed over to the government enthusiastically. But this argument confuses the purchase of a product with the payment of the tax on the product. While it is true that the purchase of the product is voluntary, the tax portion of the ticket price is not, just as a sales taxA sales tax is levied on retail sales of goods and services and, ideally, should apply to all final consumption with few exemptions. Many governments exempt goods like groceries; base broadening, such as including groceries, could keep rates lower. A sales tax should exempt business-to-business transactions which, when taxed, cause tax pyramiding. is compulsory on the purchase of clothing or books. The voluntary nature of the purchase does not make the tax any less of a tax.

Table 2: State Implicit Lottery Tax Revenue Per Capita, Fiscal Year 2011

State

Implicit Tax Revenue Per Capita

Rank

State

Implicit Tax Revenue Per Capita

Rank

U.S. Average

$59

Montana

$11

42

Alabama

No Lottery

Nebraska

$17

41

Alaska

No Lottery

Nevada

$17

41

Arizona

$22

37

New Hampshire

No Lottery

Arkansas

$32

28

New Jersey

$47

23

California

$36

27

New Mexico

$106

8

Colorado

$22

38

New York

$20

40

Connecticut

$83

10

North Carolina

$139

5

Delaware

$361

1

North Dakota

$46

24

Florida

$63

16

Ohio

$9

43

Georgia

$87

9

Oklahoma

$65

15

Hawaii

No Lottery

Oregon

$24

32

Idaho

$23

34

Pennsylvania

$144

4

Illinois

$52

19

Rhode Island

$69

14

Indiana

$30

31

South Carolina

$339

2

Iowa

$24

33

South Dakota

$58

17

Kansas

$23

35

Tennessee

$130

7

Kentucky

$49

22

Texas

$70

13

Louisiana

$30

30

Utah

$40

25

Maine

$38

26

Vermont

No Lottery

Maryland

$80

11

Virginia

$50

20

Massachusetts

$133

6

Washington

$55

18

Michigan

$71

12

West Virginia

$20

39

Minnesota

$23

36

Wisconsin

$316

3

Mississippi

No Lottery

Wyoming

$31

29

Missouri

$50

21

Note: The implicit tax revenue is the portion of lottery revenue kept by the state, or the “profit.” It does not include federal or state income tax on winnings.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Tax Foundation calculations.

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