Where Florida stands on gambling as we head into the 2026 legislative session — and what it means for South Florida players.
Florida's gambling landscape has been evolving fast. The Seminole Compact, Hard Rock Bet's online sports betting monopoly, and a rolling wave of enforcement actions against unlicensed operators are all reshaping what South Florida players can and can't do. Here's where things stand as of April 2026 — and what's coming in the next legislative session.
As of April 2026, Florida operates under the 2021 gaming compact between the state and the Seminole Tribe. That compact grants the tribe exclusive rights to offer statewide mobile sports betting. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge in June 2024, which effectively locked in the current structure at the federal level. State-court litigation is ongoing, but sports betting has remained live statewide and no court has ordered operations to pause.
The only licensed statewide sportsbook. Mobile + retail. 21+ and physically in-state only.
Seminole Hard Rock Hollywood, Coconut Creek, plus Miccosukee Casino. Slots, table games, poker, sports betting.
DraftKings, FanDuel DFS operate in Florida without explicit legalization. New legislation may formalize rules in 2026.
While the headline is that Hard Rock Bet has a monopoly, the quieter story is enforcement. Florida ramped up its crackdown on unlicensed gambling operations significantly in 2025.
The Florida Gaming Control Commission reported seizing $14.47 million in cash and 6,725 illegal slot machines during 2025 enforcement actions — more than double the roughly $7 million seized in 2024.
Storefront arcades, "skill game" parlors, gas-station slot rooms, and sweepstakes-style online platforms have all been targeted. Sweepstakes casinos operating in Florida are increasingly in the crosshairs of state regulators.
The Florida Legislature's 2026 session begins in March. Two gambling-related bills have already been pre-filed and are moving through committee. Both would significantly tighten the rules around non-Seminole online gambling.
Would make operating or promoting non-Seminole online sports betting or iGaming a third-degree felony, while participating as a bettor would be a second-degree misdemeanor. Explicitly preserves Seminole Compact activity. Also addresses insider-information betting and contests with manipulated outcomes. If enacted, takes effect July 1, 2026.
A more sweeping 86-page bill that would criminalize a wider range of online gambling, prohibit betting on pre-arranged contests, and restrict certain forms of advertising. Would also preempt local governments from setting their own gambling regulations. Still in committee.
Seminole Brighton Bay Hotel & Casino replaces the original 1980-built Seminole Brighton Casino in Okeechobee with a new 38K sq-ft gaming space and 100-room hotel.
A Florida Senate committee passes a bill 8-0 that would criminalize betting on contests using insider information. Initially dies in session but is revived for 2026.
Hard Rock Bet introduces slot-style games using historical horse/motor race data — delivered under the tribe's compact as "sports betting" rather than slot machines.
Florida lawmakers advance HB 189, strengthening criminal penalties for non-Seminole online sports betting and iGaming.
The broader HB 591 gaming reform package is introduced by Rep. Berny Jacques, targeting a wider range of online gambling activities.
This article summarizes regulatory developments for informational purposes. It is not legal advice. Gambling laws change frequently, and the 2026 legislative session may produce further changes. Always verify current rules directly with the relevant operator or the Florida Gaming Control Commission before placing wagers on any platform.
For the foreseeable future, Hard Rock Bet is the only game in town for legal Florida sports betting. Everything else is a gray area that's about to get a lot less gray.