Quote:
Originally Posted by Pioneer10
I don't think these guys realize when they got there contract how much they'll actually take back.
The Feds will take close to 37%
The state will come in and then get anything from 0-9% on top of that.
There are special athlete taxes in certain juridictions so they're goes another percentage
Then you got to pay your agent what 5%???? and I'm sure that not based on net income after taxes but gross income
So out of that 5 million dollar contract, the amount you get back is probably close to or less then 50% - 2.5 million to take home. Now an easy estimate on how much once your career is OVER you probably will get back in terms of income from your assets is about 5%. So to bring in $200k to live off when you retire you'd need about 4 million in the bank.
So let's run the numbers on a guy who makes ten million in his NBA career and wants to know that he will financially secure based just on his NBA career (i.e. he doesn't have to work a day the rest of his life).
10 million
- 5million (taxes/agents/etc)
- 4 million (for the rest of his life he'll be able to spend 200k)
= 1 million to spend extra (that's not a lot of money when you throw a benz or two and a gargantaun house in the picture)
Now I'm not crying crocodile tears: in the scenario above the player is really set for life (i.e. 200k a year) but just imagine you throw in a divorce, child custody, a big house for mom in there and bam your financial securit of 200k/year goes away pretty quickly
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In New York City, 5 mil a year comes out to a little over 2.3 million.
96 grand a week, 33k to the fed, 6k to SS, 1.4k Medicare, 7k to the State and 3.8k to the city. No wonder players opt to live in NJ, they save nearly 2k more a week. - 44grand a week in NYC
That same 5mil in florida comes out to 55k a week.
Sure, to everyone here they'll still act like players shouldn't complain, but imagine forking over more than half of your pay in taxes.