Gamblers in Romania Receive Bad News, Government Raises Taxes
Posted on: July 20, 2022, 07:16h.
Last updated on: July 21, 2022, 02:37h.
Romania’s plan to increase taxes on its gambling industry is moving forward. Unfortunately, it is also adding more taxes, which could prove detrimental to the growth of the legal sector.
At the end of June, Romania confirmed that it would implement a 40% tax on online gambling withdrawals. On July 15, the government officials put the measure in place, but on a sliding scale. In addition, licensing fees are going up for both land-based and online operators.
At the same time, it approved another initiative that will add a 5% tax to gambling advertising. However, it will give a break to sports organizations or federations that offer marketing in stadiums and gyms. These won’t have to pay the tax.
As of August 1, players will have to pay a withholding tax on their income from gambling. The rate is 3% for amounts up to RON10,000 (US$2,069) and 20%, plus RON300 (US$62.10), up to RON66,750 (US$13,823). Anything above that means handing over 40% to the government, plus RON11,650 (US$2,413).
Gaming Operators, Players to Open Wallets
Companies producing and/or distributing remote gambling software will also pay more. Their annual licenses are now RON46,900 (US$9.713), up from RON29,621 (US$6,134). They will also pay taxes on a sliding scale, with some rates increasing to 23% of gross gaming revenue.
In addition, the fee for the mandatory “documentation analysis fee” is increasing. When applying for a remote gambling license, operators previously paid RON12,342 (US$2,554). However, now they will pay RON14,810 (US$3,065).
That money is just for the analysis. There is still a fee to receive the license. This is increasing from RON41,963 to 46,900 (US$8,690 to $9,703).
Gambling companies will now also be subject to fines of RON20,000-40,000 (US$4,138-8,276) if they violate various statutes. For example, they cannot use the word “casino” in their names, except for organizers who operate casino activity, and then only at their authorized locations.
Operators will need to verify the validity of their customers’ identification. However, the onus is on the customer to provide valid proof. These players risk fines of RON20,000-40,000, just like before.
Marketing Becomes More Expensive
Marketing and advertising contracts for promoting brands, platforms, and gambling activities in public spaces, on public roads, or through a television service must be communicated to the ONJN, Romania’s gaming regulator. The responsible party must present the information within five working days from the launch date.
Gambling organizers owe advertising fees for gambling activities. In the case of advertising contracts managed by a third party that promotes a legal gambling service in the country, the advertiser is responsible for the fee.
The advertising fee for gambling activities represents 5% of the value of the advertising contracts. Payments are due by the 25th of the month following the month in which the entities signed the agreement. In the case of contracts that provide for periodic payments to the provider, the obligation to pay the fee is due on the last day of the month in which the obligation to pay becomes due.
The Romanian government projects that all of the tax changes will positively impact the country’s fiscal budget. It believes it will add around 40% annually, increasing the budget by RON530.4 million (US$109.84 million). However, what it may not be taken into account is the shrinkage that will come as more players seek out cheaper offshore alternatives.
Related News Articles
Most Popular
This Pizza & Wings Costs $653 at Allegiant VIP Box in Vegas!
Sphere Threat Prompts Dolan to End Oak View Agreement
MGM Springfield Casino Evacuated Following Weekend Blaze
Atlantic City Casinos Experience Haunting October as Gaming Win Falls 8.5%
Most Commented
-
VEGAS MYTHS RE-BUSTED: Casinos Pump in Extra Oxygen
November 15, 2024 — 4 Comments— -
Chukchansi Gold Casino Hit with Protests Against Disenrollment
October 21, 2024 — 3 Comments—
No comments yet