Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has signed Senate File 2289, putting new enforcement authority into the state gambling law as of July 1, 2026. The measure is not a standalone sweepstakes casino ban; it's a broader gambling bill, with the relevant language placed in Division I and tied to Iowa Code Chapter 99.
Key Takeaways
- Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has signed into law a bill targeting online sweepstakes casinos.
- The law empowers regulators to issue cease-and-desist orders against suspected unlicensed gambling operators.
- It is not a direct sweepstakes casino ban but gives enforcement agencies sharper tools.
The practical change is still important for the sweepstakes casino market. The Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission will now have clear power to issue cease-and-desist orders when it believes an operator is offering gambling-related activity in the state without a license. That authority can also support court action if the commission seeks injunctive relief.
The law applies across several verticals, including pari-mutuel wagering, advance deposit wagering, fantasy sports, games of chance, gambling, and sports wagering. Sweepstakes casinos fall into the wider enforcement picture because their dual-currency products have never had a formal Iowa licensing route.
That puts Iowa in a different position from states that have passed direct bans on the model. For now, the state has armed its regulator rather than outlawing the vertical by name. The result is a quieter but still meaningful shift.
The measure was introduced to Iowa’s Senate in February by the Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals, and Licensing. It passed both the Senate and the House with unanimous votes before receiving the green light to head to the governor on May 5.
Enjoying Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account
Oklahoma overrides Governor's veto
Iowa's new law stops short of a ban, but Oklahoma has moved in the other direction. State legislators overrode Gov. Kevin Stitt's veto of SB 1589 on the final day of the 2026 session, making the sweepstakes casino bill law despite the governor's objections.
The override passed by wide margins. The Senate voted 34-10, and the House followed with a 68-19 vote, giving the legislature enough support to push the measure through without Gov. Stitt.
SB 1589 targets online casino-style games that use items of value in dual-currency systems. The law includes language aimed at tokens and similar products used by sweepstakes operators, while leaving room for tribal gaming approved under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
The penalties are sharper than Iowa's enforcement approach. Operating or helping facilitate the covered games in Oklahoma becomes a Class C felony. The law carries fines ranging from $500 to $2,000 and possible jail exposure for convictions.
Stitt had vetoed the bill on May 7, arguing that it was too broad and could catch ordinary entertainment apps. Lawmakers rejected that view. With the override complete, Oklahoma has joined the group of states treating dual-currency sweepstakes casinos as an illegal online gambling workaround rather than an unregulated promotional model.






