There is an argument to be made that DraftKings put the gambling industry in a tough spot in 2019 when it agreed to a 51% tax rate in New Hampshire and that its latest idea to impose a surcharge in high-tax states is a consequence of that.
When DraftKings, in early August, rolled out its plan to essentially tax winners in states with a tax rate above 20%, reaction was overwhelming negative.
Since then, Rush Street Interactive CEO Richard Schwartz said his company won’t follow suit. And Penn Interactive’s Jay Snowden said during the company’s earnings call said that the idea was “interesting” and “unexpected”. He didn’t completely close the door on it, but the company has no plans to tax winners in the near future.
DraftKings says it will impose the surcharge beginning 1 January 2025.
DraftKings is the second-biggest US operator by market share. The only company ahead of it is FanDuel, which declined to comment on the topic. FanDuel’s parent company, Flutter, is set to release sec..