Income Sources (SEC 61): Any income received is assumed to be taxable UNLESS it is excluded by law.

 

(a) General Definition – Except as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived, including (but not limited to):

Earned income

– Wages, salaries, tips, bonuses, and commissions

– Income from active conduct of trade or business

– Income from rendering services

– AND even income from the performance of illegal activities.

Unearned income

– Interest and Dividend income

– Rental and Royalty income

– Income from conduit entities and

– Gains from the sales of investments


 

Five Tax Tips for Gambling Income and Losses

Report any gambling winnings as income on your tax return. Be sure you itemize (Schedule A) to deduct gambling losses up to the amount of your winnings. If you are a casual gambler, these tax tips can help:

  1. Gambling income.  Income from gambling includes winnings from the lottery, horse racing and casinos. It also includes cash and non-cash prizes. You must report the fair market value of non-cash prizes like cars and trips.
  2. Payer tax form.  If you win, the payer may give you a Form W-2G, Certain Gambling Winnings. The payer also sends a copy of the W-2G to the IRS. The payer must issue the form based on the type of gambling, the amount you win and other factors. You’ll also get a form W-2G if the payer must withhold income tax from what you win.
  3. How to report winnings.  You normally report your winnings for the year on your tax return as “Other Income.” You must report all your gambling winnings as income. This is true even if you don’t get a Form W-2G.
  4. How to deduct losses.  You can deduct your gambling losses on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. The total you can deduct, however, is limited to the amount of the gambling income you report on your return.
  5. Keep gambling receipts.  Keep records of your wins and losses. This means keeping items such as a gambling log or diary, receipts, statements or tickets.

 

 

See Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income for rules on this topic. Refer to Publication 529, Miscellaneous Deductions for more on losses. It also lists some of the types of records you should keep. You can download and view both on IRS.gov/forms at any time.


 

Have a specific question?  e-mail me at stephanie@paulinestaxservices.com and I’d be happy to locate the answers for you.

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