Skip to content

Ad Disclosure

Potential Major Changes on Way for Kansas Sports Betting

Robert Linnehan

By Robert Linnehan in Sports Betting News

Published:


NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament First Round-Arkansas at Kansas
Mar 20, 2025; Providence, RI, USA; Arkansas Razorbacks forward Jonas Aidoo (9) controls the ball against Kansas Jayhawks center Hunter Dickinson (1) at Amica Mutual Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images
  • Kansas lawmakers today voted on a budget provision that will disallow sports betting operator license extensions through FY 2026
  • The provision disallows the state to negotiate extensions with any current online sports betting operators
  • This could signal major changes forthcoming for Kansas sports betting

The Kansas sports betting market could be in line for a big change in several years, as state lawmakers approved a provision in the state budget that disallows the state from negotiating or extending the licenses of any current sports betting operators through 2026.

The approved amendment came on the final day of the state’s legislative session. The provision reads as such:

“During the fiscal year ending June 30, 2026, notwithstanding the provisions of K.S.A. 74-8734, and amendments thereto, and K.S.A. 2024 Supp. 74-8781, and amendments thereto, or any other statute, no expenditures shall be made by the above agency from moneys appropriated from the state general fund or from any special revenue fund or funds for fiscal year 2026, as authorized by this or other appropriation act of the 2025 regular session of the legislature, to negotiate or enter into any contract or extension or renewal of an existing contract for the management of sports wagering with any lottery gaming facility manager.”

Big Changes Coming to Market?

Each of the six sports betting operators in Kansas – DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, Fanatics Sportsbook, Caesars Sportsbook, and ESPN BET – have their licenses set to expire on Aug. 31, 2027.

So, what can potentially happen with this new provision? It will disallow the state to negotiate contract extensions with the sportsbooks through June 30, 2026. If a new deal isn’t reached by the time of the license expiration, the sportsbooks will no longer be able to take bets and will likely go dark.

No new sports betting plans or bills have been introduced by the legislature this session.

The approved provision will not immediately impact sports betting services in the state, but it likely portends an ominous direction state regulators may be looking to take the Kansas sports betting market. Regulators may look to modify the state’s sports betting tax rate, perhaps limit the amount of operators in the state, or even move to a market with just one or two licensed operators.

No Immediate Changes

Jeremy Kudon, president of the Sports Betting Alliance, took to his social media account on X today to calm fears that Kansas sports betting was going dark after today’s vote. Kudon clarified that the contracts run into 2027 and no immediate changes are coming.

He did note the legislature did not seem to have any idea of when the licenses were set to expire.

“But I wouldn’t let the Kansas legislature off so easy. They had no idea when these contracts expired and were willing to take your favorite OSB apps away from Kansas. We’re not going to let that happen.”

Robert Linnehan
Robert Linnehan

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.

Gambling

Recommended Reading