Cashing Out Over $10,000

#1
In all the Atlantic City Casinos there's a sign over the cashier windows saying their required to report all transactions over $10,000 for tax purposes. But if they reported your cash-out amount as "Income" then whatever you started with would also get taxed. Bad Deal! Is this what happens?

Does anyone know how this works and how to handle it gracefully when playing with more than 10,000 bankroll?

Thanks
RS
 

KenSmith

Administrator
Staff member
#2
Ctr

The regulation in question requires the filing of a Currency Transaction Report (CTR), whenever your cash transactions for the day total $10K or more. Most places start asking for identification when you get to $3000 or so, because if you make several transactions during the day you could hit the $10K important number.

This is NOT a form filed with the IRS claiming the $10K (or whatever amount) is income. Instead, it just means that you made a transaction totaling at least that amount in currency. The main intention is to prevent money laundering and to track large amounts of cash that can be an indicator of illegal activity.

These forms get filed with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). It's not a tax thing, though I'm sure that your other IRS tax forms might be cross-checked against these. For example, if you claim a low income and then transact hundreds of thousands in cash at the casino, you probably have a problem.

Intentionally 'structuring' your transactions to avoid the reporting requirements is a serious crime as well. This is one reason that some players hoard chips over time to avoid cash transactions that cause identification requirements and extra paperwork and attention from the casino.
 
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