The Nevada State Gaming Control Board releases the total amount bet on the Super Bowl about 24 hours after the game. These numbers are courtesy of 200 sportsbooks from across the state. This data goes back to 1991 – that year, bettors placed $40,080,409 worth of wagers on the Super Bowl. That’s equivalent to about $75,000,000 today.
We’re still waiting on more states to report, but legal Super Bowl betting already topped 2020‘s total.
So far, handle from 13 states plus Washington DC reporting full or preliminary results on Super Bowl 55 totaled $443.7 million:
Legal betting states reported more than $280 million in handle last year with the full US estimated around $300 million. PlayUSAexpects more than $500 million in legal US Super Bowl bets this year.
Not every state will break out details specifically for the game. States that will not do so include:
There were seven additional legal jurisdictions taking bets this year, which led to more than three times the online betting transactions over Super Bowl weekend compared to last year. That number could have been higher had multiple sportsbooks not struggled with outages before and during the game.
State | 2021 Handle | 2020 Handle | 2021 Revenue | 2021 Hold | 2021 Tax/State Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado* | $31,200,000 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Delaware | $1,900,000 | $2,100,000 | $226,000 | 11.9% | N/A |
Illinois | $45,610,513 | N/A | $7,659,269 | 16.8% | $1,148,890 |
Iowa* | $16,300,000 | $6,500,000 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Mississippi* | $8,000,000 | $6,700,000 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Montana* | $493,000 | N/A | $11,000 | 2.2% | N/A |
Nevada | $136,096,460 | $154,679,241 | $12,574,125 | 9.2% | $848,753 |
New Hampshire | $7,100,000 | $2,310,000 | -$1,700,000 | -23.9% | N/A |
New Jersey | $117,400,000 | $54,300,000 | $11,300,000 | 9.6% | N/A |
Oregon | $3,465,472 | $2,000,000 | $696,230 | 20.1% | N/A |
Pennsylvania | $53,634,680 | $30,693,942 | $9,394,271 | 17.5% | N/A |
Rhode Island* | $6,500,000 | $5,500,000 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Tennessee* | $15,427,000 | N/A | $2,801,000 | 18.2% | N/A |
Washington DC | $544,292 | N/A | -$9,546 | -1.8% | N/A |
Total | $443,671,417 | $264,783,183 | $42,952,349 | N/A | N/A |
*Denotes preliminary results
Even with travel and casino occupancy limited by the coronavirus pandemic, Nevada looks like it will again lead states in Super Bowl handle.
Nevada’s sportsbooks took $136.1 million in bets on the game, holding 9.2% for $12.6 million in revenue.
Handle fell 12% with revenue down 33% compared to 2020.
New Jersey‘s 12 retail and 21 online sportsbooks took $117.4 million in bets on the game, up 116% over last year’s total.
Sports betting revenue was $11.3 million, good for a 9.6% hold.
Even though online Pennsylvania sports betting transactions over Super Bowl weekend outpaced New Jersey by about 14%, PA’s handle was less than half of New Jersey’s.
Pennsylvania’s sportsbooks reported $53.6 million, up nearly 75% from 2020. Revenue was $9.4 million for a 17.5% hold.
Surprisingly, Illinois was the first state to report Super Bowl stats. That caught many off-guard considering the state’s gaming regulator is usually about two months behind others reporting sportsbook stats.
The legal IL sports betting market took $45.6 million in handle with 93.7% of all wagers coming online.
Sportsbooks made $7.7 million in revenue, good for an atypical 16.8% hold. That hold could be boosted by overconfident Kansas City Chiefs fans crossing into Illinois from neighboring Missouri to place their bets.
Delaware took a total of $1.9 million in bets this year, according to Delaware Lottery Director Vernon Kirk.
That’s down from $2.1 million bet last year, though the Lottery turned a profit in 2021. Total win was $226,000, up from a loss of $229,000 last year.
Delaware’s three casinos reported $1.4 million in straight wagers with $132,000 in revenue. Prop parlay cards at lottery retail locations saw $264,000 in handle with revenue of $108,000.
Futures wagers at both casinos and lottery retailers totaled $217,000 with a loss of $15,000.
There was $3.5 million bet through the Oregon Lottery‘s Scoreboard platform, operated by DraftKings-ownedSBTech.
The sportsbook reported $696,230 in revenue, or a gaudy 20.1% hold.
Nearly 1,500 new accounts were registered on Super Bowl Sunday alone.
Some states didn’t have formal reports ready with all the stats but shared some of their initial results: