More sports betting records broken in New Jersey
17 Nov 2021
“Five weekends in October meant an unusual amount of NFL and college football to bet on, and plenty of free time for gamblers to visit Atlantic City, making fresh records inevitable,” said David Danzis, an analyst for PlayNJ.com. “But what will have a longer-lasting effect is if the market for sports betting and online gambling continues to expand while Atlantic City continues to recover following the pandemic. That combination is producing some jaw-dropping results.”
New Jersey’s online and retail sportsbooks drew $1.3 billion in bets in October, easily topping September's record handle of $1.01 billion by 28.9%, according to official reporting released Wednesday. October’s betting volume was up 62.3% from the $803.1 million generated in October 2020.
The high betting volume led to a new record in gross gaming revenue, too. Sportsbooks won $84.2 million in October, up 43.8% from $58.5 million in October 2020 and up 2.1% from $82.4 million in September. October’s revenue topped the previous record of $82.6 million set in January and yielded $12.7 million in state taxes.
Five full weekends of NFL and college football were a boon for sportsbooks, boosting football betting to $499.0 million in October from $400.8 million in September. The start of the NBA season helped pour another $156.9 million into sportsbooks from basketball and baseball’s postseason ($127.1 million) and spurred significant action, too.
“With so much to bet on in October, state records for wagering are falling in every major legal sports betting market in the U.S.,” said Eric Ramsey, an analyst for the PlayUSA.com Network, which includes PlayNJ.com. “New Jersey separates itself because bettor enthusiasm for the NBA outstrips most every other market, which pushes its ceiling during a month like October to heights that were once unreachable in the U.S.”
Online sportsbooks took in $1.2 billion in wagers, accounting for 90.5% of the state’s handle in October. FanDuel/PointsBet/SuperBook continued their dominance of the online market with $39.6 million in gross revenue, up from $36.6 million in September.
The leaders were followed in revenue by:
- Resorts Digital/DraftKings/FOX Bet ($15.9 million, up from $13.2 million in September)
- Borgata Hotel Casino and Spa/BetMGM ($7.8 million, down from $10.8 million)
- Freehold/Barstool/PlayUp ($6.8 million, up from $4.1 million)
- Monmouth Park/Caesars/SugarHouse/TheScore ($3.1 million, up from $1.8 million)
- Tropicana Atlantic City/Caesars ($2.1 million, down from $3.0 million)
- Hard Rock Hotel & Casino - Atlantic City/Bet365/Unibet ($917,007, down from $1.6 million)
- Caesars Sportsbook/888 Sport/WynnBet ($446,124, up from -$568,675)
- Ocean Resort Casino/Caesars/Tipico ($284,834, down from $653,322)
- Golden Nugget - Atlantic City/BetAmerica/Betway ($54,659, up from -$70,405)
Retail sportsbooks set a record, too, with $124.2 million in October, up from $92.7 million in wagers in September. Meadowlands/FanDuel led the retail market with $4.5 million in revenue.
“More than just a growing base of bettors, online sportsbooks are expanding their reach with in-game betting and prop bets,” Ramsey said. “The result is that bettors are placing more wagers as they become more comfortable with that kind of action.”
Online casinos and poker
New Jersey joined Pennsylvania as the first U.S. states to take in more than $1 billion in gross gaming revenue from online casinos and poker rooms in a single year with a record $127.0 million in October. That topped the previous record of $122.6 million set just last month, and was up 35.9% from $93.5 million in October 2020.
Online casinos and poker rooms have now generated $1.1 billion in revenue for the year, easily reaching $1 billion in annual revenue for the first time. Pennsylvania ($1.05 billion) also went over the $1 billion mark for the year after announcing its October gaming data on Wednesday.
“The rise in revenue in all forms shows that each pillar of the state’s gaming industry is benefiting from a rising tide,” Danzis said. “Online gambling has continued to grow since launch, but annual revenue has more than tripled since sports betting launched in 2018. As impressive as $1.1 billion in revenue in 10 months is, it might not have gotten there so soon without the legalization of online sports betting.”
Other highlights from October’s report:
- Online casinos and poker generated $4.1 million in revenue per day over the 31 days of October, up from $3.0 million per day in October 2020, though down from $4.2 million per day in September.
- The revenue from online casinos and poker rooms yielded $19.05 million in state and local taxes.
- Borgata/BetMGM led the market with $38.8 million in casino and poker revenue in October. Rival Golden Nugget was second with $34.5 million in revenue. Resorts Atlantic City was third with $29.3 million.
- Online casino games generated $124.6 million of October’s revenue, up 37.0% from $90.9 million in October 2020. Online poker generated the remaining $2.4 million in revenue, down 3.4% from $2.5 million in October 2020.