Mississippi House Yet Again Passes Online Sports Betting Bill

By Robert Linnehan in Sports Betting News
Published:

- The Mississippi House of Representatives approved an online sports betting bill
- House lawmakers approved Rep. Casey Eure’s (R-116) bill by an 89-11 vote
- The bill heads to the Senate, where it failed last session
Will it be the same old song and dance in Mississippi this year for online sports betting, or does a House approved bill actually stand a chance in the Senate?
The Mississippi House of Representatives yesterday approved Rep. Casey Eure’s (R-116) online sports betting bill, HB 1302, by an 89-11 vote, once against sending the legislation to the Mississippi Senate.
A similar course of events occurred last session, with the Senate pulling all sports betting language out of the approved bill and the law dying in a conference committee.
Will 2025 Be Different?
Will Eure’s bill stand a chance in 2025? While the majority of the legislation is similar to his 2024 bill, Eure has made a significant change for online sports betting to be more palatable for retail casinos in the state.
His bill earmarks $6 million annually to a new Retail Sports Wagering Protection Fund. The fund will allow casinos who choose to not partner with an online sports betting operators to apply for a portion of revenue from the fund.
“At the end of each calendar year, any licensed gaming establishment without a platform whose total annual sports wagering revenue is below the total annual retail sports wagering revenue the same licensed gaming establishment without a platform received in 2024 may apply for a portion of the funds in the Retail Sports Wagering Protection Fund,” Eure wrote in the bill.
The Retail Sports Wagering Protection Fund will receive $6 million annually through 2030.
Any additional revenue over the $6 million threshold will be placed in the state’s road and bridge repair fund.
State casino representatives protested an expansion of online sports betting in Mississippi due to fears of revenue cannibalization.
His bill also increases the number of potential online sports betting partners for the state’s 26 commercial dockside and land-based casinos from one to two.
The bill has yet to be heard by the Senate and transferred to a Senate committee.
Launch No Later Than Dec. 8, 2025
The bill sets a universal launch date of no later than Dec. 8, 2025.
The bill includes a tiered tax system for adjusted sports betting revenue as follows:
- 4% of gross revenue not surpassing $50,000 per month
- 6% of gross revenue that surpasses $50,000, but does not surpass $134,000 per month
- 8% of gross revenue that surpasses $134,000 per month
Each operator will also have to pay an additional 4% in gross revenue into the road and bridge repair fund. Operators would have to pay a maximum of 12% in adjusted gross revenue to the state depending on their revenue each month.

Regulatory Writer and Editor
Rob covers all regulatory developments in online gambling. He specializes in US sports betting news along with casino regulation news as one of the most trusted sources in the country.