Six states have banned sweepstakes casinos in 2026, and the exits have already started. On June 2, two major operators, Mega Bonanza and Jackpota, shut off Gold Coin and Sweeps Coin play in Indiana and Maine, the first two states to enforce a 2026 ban. If you play sweeps casinos, the map of where you can legally do so is shrinking fast.
Here is where things stand: which states are out, which bans failed, and what it means for your account.
Key Takeaways
- Six US states passed sweepstakes casino bans in the first five months of 2026, matching all of 2025.
- Indiana and Maine are enforcing now. Operators Mega Bonanza and Jackpota exited both states on June 2, 2026.
- Louisiana folded sweepstakes gaming into its anti-racketeering law, allowing prosecution of operators, payment processors, and affiliates.
- Oklahoma’s ban (SB 1589) takes effect November 1, 2026. Tennessee signed its ban on May 22.
- Bans failed in Virginia, Florida, and Massachusetts, and sweepstakes casinos remain legal in most states.
The 2026 Sweepstakes Ban Wave, State by State
2026 has already matched all of 2025 in just five months. Six states have passed measures that ban or gut sweepstakes-style gaming, and operators are pulling out rather than risk enforcement. The pace is the story. What took a full year in 2025 took less than half that in 2026.
| State | Status | Effective | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indiana | Banned | In effect | Operators exited June 2 |
| Maine | Banned | In effect | Operators exited June 2 |
| Oklahoma | Banned (SB 1589) | Nov 1, 2026 | Passed House 65 to 21 |
| Louisiana | Banned (HB 883 / HB 53) | 2026 | Folded into anti-racketeering law |
| Tennessee | Banned | 2026 | Signed May 22 |
| Virginia, Florida, Massachusetts | Ban failed | N/A | Bills died as sessions ended |
Indiana and Maine Forced the First Exits
Indiana and Maine were first across the line. On June 2, Mega Bonanza and Jackpota added both states to their prohibited list, cutting off Gold Coin and Sweeps Coin play right away. Existing players in those states lost access overnight. This is the part most people miss. A ban does not give you months to wind down. When an operator decides the legal risk is too high, it blocks the state and closes accounts, sometimes on the same day the law takes hold.
Louisiana Goes the Furthest
Louisiana’s approach is the one the industry fears most. Governor Jeff Landry signed HB 883 and HB 53 in mid-May, and the laws do more than ban the games. They fold sweepstakes gaming into the state’s anti-racketeering framework. That lets prosecutors pursue not just operators, but payment processors, software providers, and affiliates connected to a sweeps platform. A straight ban removes the games. Louisiana’s version turns the whole supply chain into a target.
The real shift in 2026 is not the number of bans, it is the method. Louisiana treating sweepstakes gaming as racketeering hands every other state a far sharper tool, and that is what should worry operators and their partners.
Ethan Blackburn, Cryptsy
Oklahoma and Tennessee Round Out the List
Oklahoma’s SB 1589 cleared the state House by a 65 to 21 vote and becomes law on November 1. The delay matters. Players there still have access for now, but the clock is running. Tennessee moved faster. Governor Bill Lee signed his state’s bill on May 22, making Tennessee the sixth state to act against sweepstakes gaming in 2026. The common thread is the argument lawmakers keep making: that the Gold Coin and Sweeps Coin model is online casino gambling in everything but name, operating without a license and without paying gaming tax.
Where the Bans Failed
The sweep was not total. Bills aimed at sweepstakes casinos died in Virginia, Florida, and Massachusetts when their legislative sessions expired without a vote. For players in those states, nothing changes for now. For the operators, those three wins bought time, not safety. Failed bills tend to come back the next session with sharper language, and the 2026 results give lawmakers a template to copy.
Stake.us and the Legal Cloud Over the Industry
The pressure is not just legislative. Stake.us, the sweepstakes arm of the largest crypto casino in the world, is facing a federal class action in Ohio and enforcement attention in California. It is already blocked in more than a dozen states. When the biggest name in the space is fighting in court, every smaller operator has to weigh whether a borderline state is worth the exposure. That calculation is why exits like Indiana and Maine happen quickly once a law passes.
What This Means for Players
If you live in a state that has banned sweepstakes casinos, your account will be closed and your access cut off. The single most important move is to redeem any Sweeps Coins for prizes before the cutoff date, because balances can be frozen once a state is blocked. If you live anywhere else, nothing changes today, but the direction is clear.
- Check your state’s current status before you deposit or redeem
- Redeem Sweeps Coins early if a ban is pending where you live
- Keep records of purchases and redemptions in case an account closes
- Watch for repeat bills in states where a ban failed this year
For a fuller picture of where the model still works, see our guide to the best sweepstakes casinos and our breakdown of which states allow Chumba Casino.
The Bottom Line
Sweepstakes casinos are walking into the same regulatory squeeze that has hit every gray-market gambling model before them. Six states in five months is not a blip, it is a trend with momentum, and Louisiana’s anti-racketeering angle gives other states a tougher tool to copy. Expect more bans through the rest of 2026 and into 2027. The operators that survive will be the ones that pick their states carefully and treat compliance as the product, not an afterthought. For players, the rule is simple: know your state, and do not leave a balance sitting where a ban could lock it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which states have banned sweepstakes casinos in 2026?
Indiana, Maine, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Tennessee are among six states that passed sweepstakes-banning measures in 2026. Indiana and Maine are already enforcing their bans, and operators exited both on June 2.
Can I still play sweepstakes casinos in 2026?
Yes, in most states. The 2026 bans cover a handful of states, and sweepstakes casinos remain legal in the majority. Always check your state’s current status before playing.
What happens to my account if my state bans sweepstakes casinos?
Operators block access and close accounts in banned states, sometimes immediately. Redeem any Sweeps Coins for prizes before the cutoff date, since balances can be frozen once a state is blocked.
Why are states banning sweepstakes casinos?
Lawmakers argue the Gold Coin and Sweeps Coin model is unlicensed online casino gambling that avoids gaming tax. Louisiana went further, folding sweepstakes gaming into its anti-racketeering law so prosecutors can pursue operators, processors, and affiliates.
Is Stake.us still legal?
Stake.us still operates in many states under the sweepstakes model, but it faces a federal class action in Ohio and enforcement pressure in California, and it is already blocked in more than a dozen states.
Did any sweepstakes bans fail in 2026?
Yes. Bills targeting sweepstakes casinos failed in Virginia, Florida, and Massachusetts after their legislative sessions expired without a vote.
