North Carolina imposes 6% tax on prediction markets, raises sports betting tax to 23%
The Tar Heel State becomes the first to formally recognize CFTC authority over prediction markets in state law, creating a two-tier tax framework that treats event contracts very differently from sportsbooks.
North Carolina just drew a clear line between prediction markets and sports betting, and the tax rates tell you exactly which one the state wants to encourage.
Governor Josh Stein signed a $34 billion budget bill, SB 257, that introduces a 6% tax on prediction market operators’ net trading fee revenue while hiking the sports betting tax from 18% to 23% of gross wagering revenue. Both provisions take effect January 1, 2027.
A regulatory first for prediction markets
North Carolina is the first state in the country to formally recognize the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s authority over prediction markets in statute.
If you’re a prediction market platform registered with the CFTC, you don’t need a separate state license to operate in North Carolina. That’s a big deal for platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi, which have spent years navigating a patchwork of state-by-state regulatory uncertainty.
Prior to this legislation, North Carolina had no dedicated tax framework for prediction markets at all. Operators were only on the hook for the state’s 2.25% corporate income tax, the same rate any business would pay. Now they’ll face a targeted 6% levy on net trading fees.
The math favors prediction markets
Sports betting operators will pay 23% on gross wagering revenue. Prediction market operators will pay 6% on net trading fees. For sports betting operators, the jump from 18% to 23% represents a nearly 28% increase in their tax rate.
Why this matters beyond North Carolina
The CFTC recognition piece is particularly significant for the crypto-adjacent prediction market space. Polymarket, which runs on the Polygon blockchain, has become one of the most visible prediction platforms in the world. Its election markets drew massive attention during the 2024 US presidential race. But it has operated in a legal gray zone domestically, with US users technically restricted from the platform.
Kalshi, which holds CFTC registration, has fought its own battles to offer event contracts on everything from elections to economic data releases. A state formally blessing CFTC oversight as sufficient gives these platforms a much cleaner path to operating across the US.
What this means for investors and traders
For crypto-native prediction platforms, the North Carolina framework is broadly positive. A dedicated tax regime, even one that adds costs, is better than ambiguity. The January 2027 effective date gives operators a runway to prepare.
Traders using these platforms should watch for fee structure changes. Operators absorbing a new 6% tax on net trading fees will likely pass some of that cost through to users, either directly or through wider spreads.