The latest: New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu formally signed the state’s sports betting bill into law; Maine will formally have to wait till early 2020 for sports gambling; North Carolina appears close to death a sports gambling legislation; along with the Washington D.C. city council approved a controversial sports gambling contract.
Darren Rovell caught up with just two legal experts — Jake Williams and Daniel Wallach — to observe when they anticipate physical and online sports gambling to be legal in every one of the 50 states.
Updated on July 12, 2019
It’s been a year since the Supreme Court struck down the ban on sports betting, allowing it to be legalized by states if they prefer.
So where do we stand a year? What nations are in company, and how are they doing? What nations are imminently coming online? And what states are on the back burner? We’ve compiled an extensive look at all 50 states (and Washington D.C.), together with projected legalization dates for every nation.
To make this as straightforward as possible, there is an interactive map below, and the year we anticipate them to come online orders the text for each state. Two experts — Daniel Wallach, leader at Wallach Legal, the nation’s first law firm solely dedicated to sports betting, and Jake Williams, vice president of regulatory and legal affairs for Sportradar — assisted me with the projections and sub-categories for every state.
My discussions with Daniel and Jake came in the midst of a flurry of nations legalizing. Since the beginning of May, six (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, New York and Tennessee). Do not be shocked if 15 countries in complete are accepting stakes . That is enough of a preamble dive into the list along with the map. If you’d like to browse directly to the department of your state, please click on the links below.