Trump is wrong about the NFL's 'massive tax breaks'

President Donald Trump is continuing his PR war on the NFL by turning his attention to the league’s tax status. On Tuesday morning, the president tweeted, “Why is the NFL getting massive tax breaks while at the same time disrespecting our Anthem, Flag and Country? Change tax law!”

There’s just one problem: his information is two years outdated.

The NFL was indeed a 501(c)(6) tax-exempt trade organization, beginning in 1942. But it voluntarily gave up that classification in 2015.

And its tax exempt status was long misunderstood anyway.

How the NFL’s tax status worked in the past

For starters: only the league office, and not the 32 teams, had tax exemption.

In addition, the NFL was always different from a typical nonprofit: the 501(c)(6) status is for trade organizations. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has the same label. Major League Baseball had the same status, but relinquished it in 2007. The National Hockey League, the PGA Tour, and the LPGA all still have it.

The revenue that the NFL gets from sponsorships, broadcast deals, and ticket sales was taxed even before it gave up its tax exemption.

The only money untaxed in the past was the league office’s income, i.e. profit, and it was only taxed if the league office made a profit. The NFL league office (separate from the teams) did not even become profitable until 2012.

After 2012, the exemption was saving the league office an average $10 million per year, Citizens for Tax Justice reported in 2015. The NFL will generate $14 billion in revenue this year.

A Pittsburgh Steelers fan holds a Trump sign at a game on Oct. 8, 2017. (AP)
A Pittsburgh Steelers fan holds a Trump sign at a game on Oct. 8, 2017. (AP)

What about stadium financing?

Many Twitter users on Tuesday defended Trump’s erroneous tweet by bringing up the issue of public financing for new stadiums.

Indeed, more than half of the NFL stadiums built since 1997 have received some amount of public financing help from local municipalities, and in many cases the construction is paid for in part by tax-exempt municipal bonds, all because cities believe that having an NFL stadium will boost their economy. (It usually does not.)