Chicago Sun-Times

PRITZKER BETS FANDUEL, DRAFTKINGS WILL STAY DESPITE HEFTY TAX HIKE

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

Illinois legislator­s have called the bluff of online sports betting companies that are suggesting they might reduce operations — or close up shop in the state altogether — after being slapped with a higher graduated tax system in Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s latest budget.

FanDuel and DraftKings will soon see their net revenue taxed on a scale that tops out at 40% under the spending plan passed by the Illinois General Assembly last week. That’s up from the 15% flat rate levied against sportsbook­s since the now $1 billion Illinois industry launched in 2020.

The top two mobile betting giants — who raked in more than $729 million from Illinois bettors last year and have come out on top by nearly a quarter-billion so far this year — say the hike is enough to make them “reevaluate their level of investment and participat­ion in the state.”

But Pritzker says it’s a matter of paying “their fair share” — and experts advise against betting on either of the massive gambling companies actually giving up their Illinois stakes.

“If I were the governor, I would say, ‘That’d be a shame to see you go. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out,’” said Victor Matheson, economics professor at the College of the Holy Cross in Massachuse­tts.

“It’s a completely non-credible threat. Of course, they don’t want to pay higher rates, but there’s no evidence they can’t pay. At the end of the day, they’ve made hundreds of millions of dollars selling a wildly addictive product, and the government should tax that,” Matheson said.

An army of lobbyists for DraftKings, FanDuel and other major oddsmakers — all teamed up as the Sports Betting Alliance — made the hike a difficult propositio­n for lawmakers in the hectic waning days of the spring legislativ­e session in Springfiel­d.

The governor’s proposed 35% flat tax increase proved to be one of the biggest sticking points in drawn-out budget negotiatio­ns within the Capitol’s Democratic supermajor­ities.

Republican lawmakers opposed the measure, which also raised concern among some Democrats wary of penalizing an industry that made more than $1 billion and churned out $150 million in state tax revenue last year.

“That’s a tax structure that’s tough for any industry, let alone a nascent one,” said state Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, who ended up voting in favor of the budget bill that landed on a graduated sports betting tax system similar to the one Illinois casinos pay.

The tiered system hammered out by Pritzker’s budget team taxes sportsbook­s at 20% of revenue after paying out winners up to $30 million, 25% of revenue up to $50 million, 30% of revenue up to $100 million, 35% of revenue up to $200 million and 40% of anything beyond that.

That leaves FanDuel and DraftKings hardest hit, as the only sportsbook­s among Illinois’ roster of 13 to collect more than $100 million last year.

FanDuel paid almost $62 million in state taxes on nearly $411 million in revenue last year, the biggest windfall in the state. DraftKings paid about $48 million in tax on $319 million in revenue, Illinois Gaming Board records show.

Under the graduated system, FanDuel would’ve paid the state about $145 million, while DraftKings would’ve been on the hook for $109 million.

The publicly traded companies’ stock prices dipped about 8% and 10%, respective­ly, early last week after lawmakers sent the tax hike to Pritzker’s desk.

Sports Betting Alliance president Jeremy Kudon said the new rates “counterpro­ductively penalize sports betting operators who invested millions into the local economy and created jobs in the state” — and it leaves them “no choice but to” reconsider their Illinois operations.

“This tax hike doesn’t just threaten the legal, regulated sports betting market — it will have devastatin­g effects for operators’ instate partners, including the most vulnerable downstate casinos, who rely on sports betting revenue to create jobs and invest in communitie­s,” Kudon said.

In a tight budget year, Pritzker’s office estimates the graduated system will actually net the state slightly more than the $200 million he eyed from a flat 35% tax.

“Gov. Pritzker believes corporatio­ns should pay their fair share in Illinois. Now, thanks to these adjustment­s, which put the state in line with similarly sized markets, they will,” a Pritkzer spokesman said in an email.

Sportsbook­s pay a whopping 51% tax on their online wager winnings in New York, the biggest betting state in the U.S. Rates are about 36% in Pennsylvan­ia, 20% in Ohio, 13% in New Jersey and 7% in Nevada.

Matheson’s research on sports betting markets has found no correlatio­n between higher state tax rates and the amount of money people gamble.

“A lot of states, in the rush to add sports gambling, have way, way undertaxed it. And the companies are still making out just fine in New York,” he said. “It’s only reasonable to ask for more from an industry to mitigate the harm of addiction that comes with it.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker (shown in January) is counting on $200 million in his state budget from an increase to the state’s sports wagering tax. He says it’s a matter of gambling giants paying “their fair share.”
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Gov. J.B. Pritzker (shown in January) is counting on $200 million in his state budget from an increase to the state’s sports wagering tax. He says it’s a matter of gambling giants paying “their fair share.”
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Blackhawks announcer Eddie Olczyk makes Illinois’ first sportsbook wager and puts $100 down on his hometown White Sox to win the American League pennant at 16-to-1 odds at BetRivers Sportsbook in Rivers Casino in Des Plaines in 2020.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Blackhawks announcer Eddie Olczyk makes Illinois’ first sportsbook wager and puts $100 down on his hometown White Sox to win the American League pennant at 16-to-1 odds at BetRivers Sportsbook in Rivers Casino in Des Plaines in 2020.

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