All Comparison Tables

Tribal Gaming Compacts by State

Federal & State Law Editorial TeamLast reviewed: April 2026

Whether the state permits Class III tribal gaming under IGRA compacts, whether sports betting is authorized at tribal venues, and whether revenue-sharing applies.

50 States2 data columnsLast updated: May 2026

Click any column header to sort ascending or descending. Click again to reverse, and a third time to reset.

Class III GamingSports BettingRevenue Sharing
Yes (Class II)NoYes
NoNoN/A
YesYesYes
NoNoN/A
YesNoYes
YesYesYes
YesYesYes (Foxwoods/Mohegan)
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYesYes (Seminole)
NoNoN/A
NoNoN/A
YesNoYes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYesYes
YesYesYes
No tribalLimitedN/A
YesYesYes
YesYes (2023)Yes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
LimitedYes (commercial)Limited
YesYesYes
YesNoYes
YesYes (commercial)Yes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYesYes
YesYesYes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
No tribalYesN/A
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYesYes
YesYes (commercial)Yes
YesYes (2024)Yes
YesYesYes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYes (compact)Yes
YesYesYes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
No tribalYesN/A
Yes (Class II)NoYes
YesNoYes
No tribalYes (online)N/A
Yes (Class II)NoLimited
NoNoN/A
No tribalYes (online)N/A
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesYes (in-person)Yes
No tribalYes (commercial)N/A
YesNoYes
YesYesYes
No tribalYesN/A

The federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA, 25 USC §2701-2721) governs tribal gaming. Class III (casino-style) gaming requires a tribal-state compact. After Murphy v. NCAA (2018), states may authorize sports betting, but on tribal lands it typically requires compact amendment under IGRA.

This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.