Poker Players are Facing Tax Traps and YouTube Crackdowns

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If you’re a poker shark grinding tournaments or a weekend warrior at the felt, you may have heard of some challenges facing poker players. A sneaky tax tweak buried in President Trump’s so-called “big beautiful bill” could create some serious tax pain for poker pros and amateurs with surprise IRS hits, while YouTube’s heavy-handed policies are demonetizing and deleting poker content, sidelining creators who’ve built empires on strategy sessions and bluff breakdowns. These moves have resulted in a one-two punch that could impact poker’s future, from Las Vegas tables to online streams. Let’s break down the threats and why they matter for every card player.

Tax Law Overhaul: Phantom Winnings That Could Bust Pros and Amateurs

Tucked into Trump’s sweeping tax package, set to kick in for the 2026 tax year, is a brutal change to gambling deductions: players must report 100% of winnings but can only write off 90% of losses. Under the old rules, losses fully offset winnings, keeping net-zero years tax-free. Now, a pro winning and losing $1 million faces a $100,000 “phantom” tax bill on non-existent profits, as gambling analyst Dustin Gouker puts it. One poker player explained that “There’s no other business I’m aware of that would still have to pay taxes if its revenue didn’t exceed its expenses.” It may not be a career-killer as some are claiming, but it’s ridiculously unfair. Amatuers will get hit as well. That $5,000 weekend haul from a local tourney, offset by $6,000 in losses? You’re still taxed on $500 you never pocketed, potentially saddling casual players with tax bills that deter them from the game. The American Gaming Association warns this could spark tax evasion, push folks to unregulated sites, and gut Vegas tourism, which is already slumping, by keeping high-rollers away. Bipartisan pushback is brewing, so we’ll see if this provision gets repealed.

Shutting Down Vloggers

Adding insult to injury, YouTube’s cracking down on poker videos, enforcing a March policy against content promoting uncertified online gambling or unrestricted in-person betting. Some channels are getting terminated outright, with creators like Brad Owen banned from uploading. His account was reinstated only after appeals and media pressure. Others, including Ryan Depaulo, face demonetization or algorithm throttling, slashing views and ad revenue. Poker icon Daniel Negreanu blasts it as “a clear objective to destroy poker content,” noting plummeting engagement that’s driving millions of viewers offline.

For vloggers, this is a serious problem. Owen and Negreanu built audiences dissecting hands and sharing tips, but now their reach is crippled, echoing broader crackdowns like state bans on sweepstakes poker sites. Pros and amateurs lose out too, as educational content vanishes, making the game less accessible and skill-building harder. In a world where sports betting booms, targeting poker, a skill-based grind, feels like selective warfare.

Will Poker Players Fight Back?

These hits come at a vulnerable time. Las Vegas is reeling from post-pandemic slumps and high prices, and online poker is under regulatory fire. These challenges to the poker boom are real and it will be intereting to see what comes next.

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