Can You Sports Bet In Ohio

 

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Betting on sports is one step closer to becoming legal in Ohio, after the Ohio House of Representatives on Thursday approved a gambling bill that’s been debated in the Statehouse for over a year.

House Bill 194 would put the Ohio Lottery Commission in charge of regulating the system, and would tax betting receipts at 10%, sending net proceeds to education and gambling-addiction programs. It would allow mobile betting, and also would permit certain veterans’ and fraternal organizations to offer on-site betting through approved state vendors.

Betting on sports is legal in Ohio, as long as you know where to place your bets. Ohio residents are allowed to wager on sports, but there are no physical sportsbooks in the state. The state does not permit any company, operator, or individual to run sports betting businesses, either land. The hope is that Ohioans will have legal sports betting sometime in 2021. Ohio Sports Betting FAQs. Can you bet on sports in Ohio? Sports betting is currently not legal in Ohio. However, bills have put forth by both the House and Senate regarding legalization. Is daily fantasy legal in Ohio? Yes, you can play daily fantasy games in Ohio.

Supreme court sports betting decisionBetting
  • There is a way for Ohioans to bet on sports, but it cannot be done inside the state borders right now. Disgruntled Buckeye staters will remember that it took a long time for Ohio to move forward with casino gambling as well. An amendment to the state constitution was passed in 2009 and the first casino opened in Cleveland in 2011.
  • Daily Fantasy Sports (DFS) is a new way to play on major league sports teams and players in Ohio. Try your sports knowledge skills by playing DFS, on a variety sports events like NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL PGA, MLS, and more. Most Likely Ohio Online Sports Betting Sites.

Can You Do Sports Betting In Ohio

House members approved the legislation 83-10, with ‘no’ votes coming from Republicans who are among the chambers more conservative members.

Bill sponsors said legalizing gambling on sports will bring the practice out of the shadows and allow Ohio to raise revenue off something that’s happening already. They also said it will prevent Ohio gamblers from taking their money to bordering states.

Can

Democratic State Rep. Brigid Kelley, a bill sponsor along with Republican state Rep. David Greenspan of Westlake, said a sign in her Cincinnati district advertises sports wagering just 20 minutes away — across the Indiana border.

“So Ohioans who want to wager on sports have to go spend their money somewhere else in another state,” she said. “Well it’s either that or they call ‘their guy,’ or that’s how how I understand it. But we can change that.”

The House bill has faced opposition from socially conservative groups that oppose gambling on principle. Sports leagues and teams have pushed for the bill to require operators to use official league data, which they say would protect the integrity of sports but also allow them to directly profit on sports betting by selling the data to bookmakers.

“The truth is that HB 194 functions as a reverse Robin Hood – taking from the poor and giving to the rich,” leaders with the Center for Community Values, a socially conservative organization, said in a Thursday letter to state lawmakers.

The bill still faces a tough path to becoming law. Ohio Senate leaders and Gov. Mike DeWine both favor regulating sports betting through the state Casino Control Commission. That divide has contributed to the bill becoming bogged down even as other nearby states have legalized their own sports gambling bills.

Both the House and Senate proposals would allow for mobile betting. Neither would raise much money for the state — estimates from the nonpartisan Legislative Service Commission range from $15 million to $20 million in new tax revenues.

The Senate version would levy a 6.25% tax, with proceeds going into the state’s general fund, instead of being earmarked specifically for education.

Other states have moved to legalize sports betting since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in legal in 2018, including most of Ohio’s neighbors. In December, Michigan became the fourth state neighboring Ohio to pass a legalization bill. While a Kentucky legislative committee advanced a sports gaming bill in January for full House vote, the bill has stalled since then.

Sports

The House on Thursday also approved House Bill 282, which makes it legal for charitable organizations to operate “electronic bingo” machines that resemble slot machines. The bill would expand existing laws that allow charitable organizations to offer paper “instant bingo” games, similar to lottery tickets. The bill has been backed by fraternal organizations which view the games as a way to raise revenue.

Read recent coverage from cleveland.com:

———

©2020 The Plain Dealer, Cleveland

Supreme Court Sports Betting Decision

Visit The Plain Dealer, Cleveland at www.cleveland.com

Can You Make Sports Bets In Ohio

Ohio sports gambling news

Can You Sports Bet In Ohio State Buckeyes

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.