Online sports betting to become legal in Tennessee
The state is expecting legalized sports betting to bring in about $50 million in tax revenue.
The legislation, effective 1 July, does not call for retail sports betting and the online platforms for sports betting would be run by the state lottery. All bets must be placed within state borders. The bill also prohibits anyone under age 21 from wagering on sports, as well as athletes and owners of a team involved in a game, people who run sports betting operations, and others "with influence over a game’s outcome."
In addition to making it an online-only bill, the House also increased the license fee to $750,000 annually and the tax rate to 20%. The bill also requires operators to use official data sources for settling in-play bets.
The TN sports betting bill is a first for many reasons: first non-casino state, first state with only online sports betting, and the first state that restricts operators to use official data for in-play betting. #sportsbetting
— Sara Slane (@Sara_Slane) April 30, 2019
Tennessee becomes the eighth U.S. state (Delaware, New Jersey, Mississippi, West Virginia, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island being the others) to join Nevada in legalizing sports wagering, but the only one with a mobile-only offering, since the U.S. Supreme Court, deemed the federal ban on sports betting to be unconstitutional last May.