- 24/7 sports gambling apps not legal
- 24/7 iCasino apps not legal
- No steps taken to close Kalshi / Robinhood betting loophole.
Alaska AK
Score: 95 / 100
Report Card
Legal Status
| Legal Status | Notes & sources | |
|---|---|---|
| Online sports betting | Not legal |
|
| iCasino (online casino-style games) | Not legal |
|
History and Overview
Attempts to legalize sports betting
- 2025-03-21: In March 2025, HB 145 (Mobile Sports Wagering; Tax) was introduced to authorize statewide mobile sports wagering; no final passage yet.
- Alaska State Legislature . Accessed 2026-01-25.
Score math
Safety Scoring
Scoring methodology and formula.
Online sports betting
Online sports betting apps are not legal.
- Financial Services, Technology and Communications . Accessed 2026-01-25.
- Gambling in the United States — Sports betting . Accessed 2026-01-25.
iCasino (online casino-style games)
iCasino apps are not legal.
- Financial Services, Technology and Communications . Accessed 2026-01-25.
Neither online sports betting nor iCasino
No sports betting apps and no iCasino apps.
- Financial Services, Technology and Communications . Accessed 2026-01-25.
- Gambling in the United States — Sports betting . Accessed 2026-01-25.
- Financial Services, Technology and Communications . Accessed 2026-01-25.
State promotion / advertising of online gambling
Not in place.
Tax Score
Tax rate (sports betting operators): Not applicable (online sports betting not legal).
- This project focuses on tax structure only where online betting apps are legal.
Credit card funding ban
Bans using credit cards to fund online betting.
Problem gambling hotline
Publicly advertised problem-gambling hotline/helpline (and referral to support resources). This is a low-efficacy intervention.
Funding for problem gambling messaging
Earmarks funds for problem gambling education/public-awareness messaging (not just voluntary operator messaging). This is typically small and often poorly executed.
Non-integrated Self-exclusion list
State provides a self-exclusion program (ideally centralized across licensed operators). This is a low-efficacy tool when not integrated into the gambling user flow.
Mandatory loss limits
Mandatory, enforceable, cross-operator loss limits that cap how much a person can lose in a time period (e.g., monthly). Highly effective for preventing bankruptcies.
Inducement / promo restrictions
Bans or tightly limits promotional inducements (bonuses, risk-free bets, boosted odds) used to accelerate losses.
Ban on in-game betting
Prohibits in-game/live betting so wagers can only be placed before events begin.
Mandatory operator intervention / duty of care
Requires operators to stop offering bets when users exhibit defined high-risk patterns (not merely provide links to a hotline).
Spousal consent for joint accounts
Requires explicit spousal consent before connecting or using a shared/joint bank account for gambling.
Default deposit/loss limits at signup
Requires players to set limits at signup (or imposes defaults) rather than burying optional limit-setting tools.
Deposit-to-bet waiting period
Imposes a mandatory waiting period between deposits and wagering to reduce compulsive 'tilt' behavior.
Higher minimum age (25+)
Raises the minimum age above 21 (e.g., 25) for high-risk online gambling products.
Strong advertising protections
Imposes meaningful limits on gambling advertising (e.g., time/place bans, tobacco-style warnings) beyond generic 'gamble responsibly' language.
Not allowed in app stores (web only)
Removes gambling apps from app stores, where the easy access and notification systems increase addictive patterns. In states with legal online gambling, these services would remain available on websites.
Public transparency & harm metrics
Requires public reporting on operator harm indicators (e.g., share of revenue from high-risk users, intervention rates), enabling oversight.
Close the Kalshi “investment contract” loophole
State action to block sports event contracts marketed as federally regulated derivatives. Joining the 36-state attorney general coalition earns 2 points; cease-and-desist earns 4; court action earns 8 (max 8).
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