Kalshi taxes in Michigan

State income tax ~4.25% · 2026 · 4 min read

If you trade Kalshi from Michigan, your gains face tax on two fronts: the federal government, and Michigan itself. This page covers how Michigan treats prediction-market profit, the rate to expect, and how to estimate the combined bill.

It is educational, not tax advice. The federal classification of event contracts is genuinely unsettled, and your Michigan rate depends on your specific income, so treat the numbers here as estimates and confirm with a professional.

Do you owe Michigan tax on your Kalshi gains?

Yes, on two levels. Your Kalshi trading profit is taxable federally no matter where you live, and Michigan also taxes that income at the state level. So a winning year on Kalshi means both a federal bill and a Michigan bill on the same gains.

Michigan applies a flat rate of about 4.25% to individual income, and prediction-market gains are generally swept in as ordinary income. There is no separate, lower state rate for trading profit the way the federal side has for long-term capital gains.

How Michigan treats prediction-market gains

Most states, Michigan included, tax the full gain as ordinary income and do not recognize the federal Section 1256 60/40 split. That means the contested federal classification question does not change your Michigan number: the state taxes your net gain either way.

Michigan uses a single flat income-tax rate of about 4.25%, which makes the state estimate straightforward once you know your net profit.

Estimating your Michigan bill

As a rough illustration, on a $5,000 net Kalshi profit, a 4.25% Michigan rate is about $213 in state tax, before anything you owe the IRS. Your real number depends on your bracket and your federal treatment.

The cleanest way to see the combined federal-plus-Michigan picture is to plug your own profit and federal rate into the state tax calculator below, which estimates both at once.

The federal side still applies

Federally, your event-contract gains can be treated as ordinary income, under Section 1256's 60/40 split, or as gambling, and the three lead to very different bills. That question is unsettled and applies no matter which state you trade from. Our Kalshi taxes guide walks through all three, and the cents-vs-dollars guide covers the most common reconciliation mistake.

Estimate your Michigan + federal bill
Plug in your profit and rate to see federal plus Michigan tax side by side, then let ContractTax turn your full Kalshi history into the numbers behind it.
State tax calculator →Try ContractTax free

Frequently asked

Do I owe Michigan state tax on Kalshi winnings?
Yes. Michigan taxes the gain as ordinary income at about 4.25%, on top of your federal tax.
Does Michigan recognize the Section 1256 60/40 split?
Generally no. Michigan, like most states, taxes the full gain as ordinary income, so the federal 1256 split does not lower your state bill.
What is the Michigan tax rate on trading gains?
Michigan applies a flat individual income-tax rate of about 4.25% to the gain.
This page is educational and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. State rates are approximate 2025-2026 estimates, graduated states are shown at the top marginal rate, and the federal treatment of prediction-market contracts is unsettled. Confirm your situation with a qualified tax professional.
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