New Jersey's Sports Betting Handle, Revenue Decrease in May

Brad Senkiw - Contributor at Covers.com
Brad Senkiw • News Editor 16+ years betting experience
Updated: Jun 17, 2026 , 04:40 PM ET • 4 min read

The Garden State’s sportsbooks hauled in $83.7 million from a $912.9-million handle that was down 9.6% from the previous May.

Photo By - Reuters Connect.

In a May highlighted by a deep NBA playoff run by the nearby New York Knicks, New Jersey sportsbooks saw year-over-year declines in handle and revenue. 

Key Takeaways

  • New Jersey operators haven’t generated a $1-billion monthly handle since January.

  • The Knicks’ 8-0 playoff record in May favored bettors and weighed on sportsbook revenue.

  • Sportsbooks still won back a solid 9.3% from a $912.9-million handle.

The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement recently reported that online and retail operators combined to generate $912.9 million, a 9.6% decrease from May 2025’s $1.01 billion. Garden State sportsbooks still haven’t produced a $1-billion handle since January, and May’s wagering was down 2% from April.  

May’s gross revenue of $85.2 million also dipped 16.9%, but operators still recorded a solid 9.3% hold in a month when the Knicks went 8-0. New Jersey sports betting reached a double-digit win rate last May.      

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Revenue breakdown

The Garden State’s 16 online sportsbooks produced $83.7 million in New Jersey revenue, a 14.6% decline compared to the previous May. The down month didn’t put too much of a damper on the year-to-date total. The $455.6 million for mobile operators in 2026 is down just 1% compared to the first five months of 2025. 

Retail revenue took a sharper year-over-year decline, falling from $4.5 million in May 2025 to $1.5 million in the latest reported month.    

Operators paid out $18 million in taxes to the state, which has amassed nearly $95 million from sports betting alone in 2026. 

FanDuel stays on top

Online Operator May Revenue YTD Revenue
FanDuel $34.5 million $181.6 million  
DraftKings $21.7 million   $117.6 million  
Fanatics Sportsbook $7.6 million  $38 million
bet365 $7 million  $33.2 million
BetMGM $6.1 million   $35.9 million
Caesars $1.8 million  $12.5 million

 

FanDuel’s $34.5 million in gross revenue led all online sportsbooks in New Jersey during May. The operator’s profits were down 22% from last May, while year-to-date revenue is down 2.6%. DraftKings suffered an even bigger drop as year-over-year revenue fell 23.4% to $21.7 million. Revenue for all of 2026 is down 7% compared to the first five months of 2025. 

Fanatics held off bet365 and BetMGM to produce the third-best revenue, reaching $7.6 million, a 22.6% increase from the previous May. bet365 ranked fourth with $7 million in revenue, pushing the operator past $30 million in 2026, a 43% year-over-year increase.

BetMGM’s $6.1 million improved greatly from the $1.5 million the operator produced last May, and year-to-date profits are up over 20%. Caesars stayed just ahead of Hard Rock Bet ($1.6 million) and theScore Bet ($1.4 million), which experienced a 71% revenue decline from last year, when the PENN Entertainment brand was still using ESPN.  

No other operators reached $1 million in May revenue, and Prime Sportsbook was the lone online sportsbook to finish May in the red.          

iGaming flourishes

New Jersey’s online casinos generated $276.3 million in May revenue, an 11.9% year-over-year profit increase. Year-to-date revenue from iGaming surpassed $1.3 billion after May’s haul, leading to 14.4% growth from the previous five-month period. 

Land-based casino revenue was stagnant in May compared to the same month in 2025, and total gaming revenue reached $627.1 million, a 2% year-over-year increase. Year-to-date total gaming profits of $2.9 billion are up 7.2% from the same period last year, while the Garden State’s tax revenue closed in on $420 million year-to-date. 

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Brad Senkiw - Covers
News Editor

Brad has been covering sports betting and iGaming industry news for Covers since 2023. He writes about a wide range of topics, including sportsbook insights, proposed legislation, regulator decision-making, state revenue reports, and online sports betting launches. Brad reported heavily on North Carolina’s legal push for and creation of online sportsbooks, appearing on numerous Tar Heel State radio and TV news shows for his insights.

Before joining Covers, Brad spent over 15 years as a reporter and editor, covering college sports for newspapers and websites while also hosting a radio show for seven years.

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