Eight states now have legal real-money online casinos, with Maine next in line
CBS Sports says eight states have legalized real-money online casinos as of May 2026: Connecticut, Delaware, Michigan, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Maine, and West Virginia. Maine has passed authorization legislation but is still working through launch steps, with a live market expected no earlier than the second half of 2026. The article also notes that tax-revenue needs are a key driver in states considering iGaming.
Virginia and Maryland iGaming pushes stall out in the 2026 session
CBS Sports reports that Virginia lawmakers advanced two iGaming bills, but the House and Senate failed to agree before session ended, delaying any possible launch until at least 2028 under reenactment rules. In Maryland, Senate Bill 885 received a hearing but did not advance before the deadline despite arguments that online casinos could generate substantial tax revenue. Both states remain without legal online casino play.
Rhode Island’s single-operator online casino remains live and active
CBS Sports says Rhode Island continues to operate an active online casino market after legalizing iGaming in 2023 and launching Bally’s on March 5, 2024. The market offers regulated slots and live dealer table games to players physically located in the state and is restricted to one operator. It remains one of the few fully regulated U.S. iCasino jurisdictions.
Commercial gaming revenue tracker points to continued resilience across U.S. gaming
The AGA’s Commercial Gaming Revenue Tracker is the industry’s monthly snapshot of U.S. commercial gaming results, covering casino, sports betting, and iGaming performance. It is used to benchmark statewide and national revenue trends and to track how regulated gaming segments are contributing to the market. The tracker is a core reference for commercial casino and online gaming revenue data.
Gaming America promotes a broad slate of real-money online casinos and bonus-heavy offshore options
Gaming America’s online-casinos guide highlights a wide range of real-money casino sites, emphasizing bonuses, game libraries, payment methods, and fast payouts. The piece notes that access varies by state and frames many of its recommendations around internationally licensed operators serving U.S. players. It also discusses slots, live dealer games, crash titles, and banking methods such as ACH, Zelle, PayNearMe, cards, and crypto.
Social Signalsweepstakesaffiliate-marketingresponsible-gamingsocial-casinosocial
Sweepstakes and offshore casino marketing continues to blur the line for U.S. players
The Gaming America guide leans heavily into promotion, with large welcome bonuses, affiliate disclosures, and reminders that players should check local laws. Its framing reflects the broader U.S. market conversation around where legal regulated play ends and offshore or sweepstakes-style access begins. That dynamic keeps consumer confusion and responsible-gaming messaging in the spotlight.