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Illegal

Sweepstakes Casinos in Nevada

Sweepstakes casinos do not operate in Nevada. If you're in Nevada, this is the page that tells you why and what your options are.

Last verified May 2026

  • BannedCurrent status
  • NRS Ch. 463Operative statute
  • Long-standingSince
  • UnlicensedWhy sweeps are out
  • None serveOperators in NV
  • Retail casinosLegal alternative

Summary

Despite hosting the largest regulated casino market in the United States, Nevada does not permit unlicensed sweepstakes casino operation. Operators block Nevada IPs under the state's pre-existing gambling control framework.

The law

  • Operative statute: Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 463 (Nevada Gaming Control Act)
  • Enforcement authority: Nevada Gaming Control Board; Nevada Gaming Commission
  • Penalties: Penalties under the Nevada Gaming Control Act apply to unlicensed gaming activity.
  • Legislative history: Long-standing position. Nevada has maintained a tightly regulated gaming environment for decades.

Operator status

All major sweepstakes operators block Nevada IPs and Nevada residents under their own terms.

What this means if you live in Nevada

Nevada residents cannot use sweepstakes casino platforms.

  • Age requirement: Not applicable for sweepstakes. For regulated Nevada casinos, 21+.

Why the model is treated this way

Quick refresher on how the model works legally. Sweepstakes casinos run on US promotional-sweepstakes law, not gambling law. The two-currency model (Gold Coins for fun, Sweeps Coins for prizes) plus a no-purchase entry option is what keeps them outside the gambling category in most states. Where state law accepts that framing, the platforms operate. Where it doesn't, they don't.

Legal alternatives in Nevada

Nevada has the most extensive regulated gaming market in the US. Retail casinos and licensed sportsbooks (including mobile sports betting) are available to residents and visitors 21+.

Responsible gaming

Social casinos are entertainment, not income. If you or someone you know is struggling with gambling-related harm, the National Council on Problem Gambling helpline is 1-800-GAMBLER, 24/7, free, confidential. Text 800GAM. Chat at ncpgambling.org/chat. More resources on our Responsible Gaming page.

// Platform availability

Who serves this state

OperatorStatusNotes
WOW Vegas Does not serve
McLuck Does not serve
Rolla Does not serve
Hello Millions Does not serve
Legendz Does not serve
Mega Bonanza Does not serve
PlayFame Does not serve
Real Prize Does not serve
Turbo Stakes Does not serve

State availability changes — always check the operator's own terms before creating an account.

Common questions

Nevada FAQ

Not legally. Sweepstakes casinos do not operate in Nevada, and operators have geoblocked the state.

Using a VPN to circumvent geographic restrictions violates the terms of service of every major sweepstakes platform we cover. Accounts created from a banned state via VPN are typically closed without redemption when discovered. In some states, using a VPN to access prohibited gaming can also carry independent legal risk under state law. We do not recommend it.

Operators generally provide a transition window before exit, during which existing balances can be redeemed. Specifics vary by operator. If you have a Sweeps Coin balance with a platform that has announced exit from your state, redeem promptly and document the redemption.

Pure social casinos that offer only Gold Coin entertainment play — without any Sweeps Coin or prize-redemption component — may be available even in states that have banned dual-currency sweepstakes models. These are not sweepstakes casinos in the sense we cover on SkillSniff because there is no prize redemption.

About this guide: we keep an eye on the picture and update this page when anything changes. Spot something off? Email editorial@leadvault.ae and we'll fix it.

A note on healthy play

Social casinos are entertainment, not income. If play stops being fun — if you're spending more than you meant to, chasing losses, hiding play, or feeling bad about it — stop and talk to someone. The National Council on Problem Gambling runs a 24/7 helpline.