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Massachusetts Sports Betting Won’t Start Anytime Soon

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Posted on: August 4, 2022, 04:38h. 

Last updated on: August 4, 2022, 05:43h.

The Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) today held its first meeting since state lawmakers passed legislation to authorize sports betting.

Massachusetts Gaming Commission sports betting
Massachusetts Gaming Commissioner Bradford Hill expresses concerns during the agency’s virtual meeting on August 4, 2022, that the public might think legal sports betting is imminent. The regulator says time is needed to finalize sports betting regulations before the state will review applications and issue licenses. (Image: Massachusetts Gaming Commission)

The special sports betting joint conference committee last weekend reached a compromise between two competing sports gambling measures. The separate rules were passed by the Massachusetts Senate and House, then reconciled. The resolution was approved just hours before the legislature adjourned for 2022.

The news generated joy among casino and gaming interests and others supportive of expanded gaming in the commonwealth. But MGC officials say some time is needed before the first legal bet can be wagered.

This doesn’t happen overnight,” said MGC Commissioner Bradford Hill. “We are going to do this right … and take our time.”

The MGC has been preparing for legal sports betting for months. But the agency now tasked with regulating not only the state’s three commercial casinos, but also in-person and online sports betting, says the process of finalizing regulations and reviewing applications will not be rushed.

That means the odds are quite long that a legal sportsbook in Massachusetts will begin taking wagers before the NFL regular season kicks off on September 8.

2023 Launch Favored

The NFL is the most bet-on sport in the US, and that’s expected to be true in Massachusetts, where the New England Patriots call home.  Oddsmakers would prefer to begin their operations ahead of the NFL regular season and take futures action on Super Bowl LVII, but that’s unlikely.

History shows that legalized sports betting takes time to implement. In the more than 30 states that have launched regulated sports betting, the average time from a bill passing and being signed by a governor to the first bet is around six months.

Though Massachusetts is expected to be on the shorter end of that average, the time line suggests that the first regulated wager won’t be placed until around the end of the year.

The MGC meeting included numerous words of caution to the public regarding when sports gambling might begin. The commissioners were responding to some media reports, as well as some state lawmakers, that said sports betting in the commonwealth was imminent.

State Sen. Eric Lesser (D-1st Hampden), who is campaigning to become lieutenant governor, said this week that he was optimistic that sports betting would start this fall.

“The [sports betting] bill takes effect immediately after the governor’s signature,” Lesser told WAMC Northeast Public Radio. “The big piece that will take some time to implement is the licensing and the applications for the licensing, which will be run by the Gaming Commission.

“[The MGC] is prepared. They know the issues… Our hope is that it could begin as soon as this fall,” Lesser said.

Some Details Set

The sports betting compromise sitting on Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker’s (R) desk dictates certain conditions of the expanded gaming.

Gross revenue from retail sportsbooks will be subject to a 12.5% tax, while mobile sportsbook income will be taxed slightly higher at 15%.

The legislature also set the licensing fee. Each applicant deemed qualified by the MGC will be required to pay $5 million to the state in exchange for retail and mobile sports betting privileges. The five-year licenses can be renewed for another $5 million for another five-year term.

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