The short answer
For the vast majority of players β recreational, casual gamblers β winnings from casinos, slots, sports betting and the lottery are generally not taxed in South Africa. Theyβre treated as capital in nature rather than income, so they donβt attract income tax, and casinos donβt withhold any tax from your payout.
Why winnings usually arenβt taxed
South African income tax is charged on income, not on windfalls of a capital nature. A casual punterβs lucky win is considered a capital receipt, not income from a trade β so it falls outside normal income tax. This is why you receive your full withdrawal with nothing deducted at source.
The exception: professional gamblers
The picture changes if gambling is effectively your trade or business β i.e. you gamble regularly, systematically and for profit as a main income source. In that case SARS may argue the proceeds are taxable income. The boundary is fact-specific (frequency, scale, intention, whether itβs your livelihood), so if this could describe you, get professional tax advice.
Practical tips
- Keep records of significant wins and withdrawals β useful if questions ever arise.
- Crypto caveat β if you cash out via cryptocurrency, disposing of the crypto itself can have separate tax implications; keep transaction records.
- Complete FICA so payouts arenβt delayed (this is verification, not tax).
Important disclaimer
This is general information, not tax or financial advice, and tax law can change. For your specific circumstances, consult SARS or a registered tax practitioner. If gambling stops being fun, free and confidential help is available 24/7 from the National Responsible Gambling Programme on 0800 006 008. 18+ only.