Colorado Online Gambling – Laws, Casinos, and Top Sites

Colorado online gambling is a split story: online sports betting and daily fantasy sports are fully legal and regulated, but online casinos and online poker are not. Sports betting went live on May 1, 2020, and the state now has more than two dozen licensed mobile sportsbooks operating under Colorado Division of Gaming oversight, with bettors staking $5.19 billion across 2025. Land-based casinos operate only in three historic mining towns — Black Hawk, Central City, and Cripple Creek — plus two tribal casinos in the southwest corner of the state.

If you’re 21 or older and physically located in Colorado, you can legally bet on the Broncos, Avalanche, or Nuggets from your phone; if you want slots or real-money online poker, you’re out of luck until the legislature changes course.

Colorado
Online Gambling: Partially Legal
Online Sports Betting
Legal (May 2020)
Online Casino
Not Legal
Online Poker
Not Legal
Minimum Age
21+

Is Sports Betting Legal in Colorado?

Yes — online and retail sports betting are fully legal in Colorado, regulated by the Colorado Division of Gaming and the Limited Gaming Control Commission. The market launched on May 1, 2020, after voters narrowly passed Proposition DD in November 2019 (51% yes) and the legislature enacted House Bill 19-1327. Every licensed Colorado casino in Black Hawk, Central City, and Cripple Creek can partner with up to one online sportsbook “skin,” which is why more than two dozen mobile apps operate in the state despite a small population of retail casino license holders.

Colorado’s sports betting market is one of the most competitive in the country on a per-capita basis. The state reported $5.19 billion in handle across 2025 with $470.1 million in gross gaming revenue, and January 2026 set a single-month record of $630.2 million in wagers. FanDuel and DraftKings control roughly 70% of the combined online market, with BetMGM, Caesars, Fanatics, ESPN BET, bet365, and BetRivers fighting for the remaining share.

Best Colorado Sports Betting Apps (2026)

FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, and Caesars are the four most downloaded and highest-rated sportsbook apps in Colorado, with FanDuel and DraftKings alternating the top handle position in monthly Division of Gaming reports. All four offer full mobile functionality across Broncos, Avalanche, Nuggets, Rockies, and Rapids markets, plus every major college program in the Mountain West and Big 12. Below are our picks ranked on odds quality, app stability, payout speed, and Colorado-specific features.

FD
FanDuel Sportsbook
Available throughout Colorado
4.8
/5
Why It Tops CO
Cleanest app in the state, best Same Game Parlay builder for Broncos and Nuggets markets, and PayPal withdrawals typically clear in under 24 hours. Consistently sharpest pricing on Avalanche and Rockies totals.
Read FanDuel Review →

21+ only. T&Cs apply. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-270-7117.

DK
DraftKings Sportsbook
Available throughout Colorado
4.7
/5
Why It Tops CO
Deepest prop market in the state, especially for CU Buffaloes, CSU Rams, and Air Force football. DFS-to-sportsbook crossover is seamless if you already run a DraftKings DFS lineup on Rockies and Nuggets slates.
Read DraftKings Review →

21+ only. T&Cs apply. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-270-7117.

MGM
BetMGM Sportsbook
Available throughout Colorado
4.6
/5
Why It Tops CO
The “King of Parlays” branding is more than marketing — BetMGM’s parlay odds boosts are genuinely the most aggressive in the Colorado market on weekend NFL cards. MGM Rewards ties online play to Vegas and tribal casino comps.
Read BetMGM Review →

21+ only. T&Cs apply. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-270-7117.

CZR
Caesars Sportsbook
Available throughout Colorado
4.5
/5
Why It Tops CO
Caesars Rewards is the most valuable loyalty program if you travel — every Colorado bet earns tier credits redeemable at Horseshoe Black Hawk, Vegas properties, and Harrah’s nationwide. Strong live-betting interface for Nuggets and Avalanche.
Read Caesars Review →

21+ only. T&Cs apply. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-270-7117.

Beyond the top four, Colorado has one of the deepest operator lineups in the country. BetRivers (partnered with a Black Hawk property) built a loyal following among sharper bettors thanks to reduced-juice pricing on Nuggets sides. Fanatics Sportsbook launched in Colorado in early 2024 and leans into its 5% FanCash program on merch. ESPN BET went live in November 2023 and offers the deepest integration with ESPN scores, stats, and stream-alerts. bet365 entered Colorado in 2023 and remains the sharpest option for soccer and tennis markets.

ℹ️
By the Numbers

Colorado sportsbooks took $630.2 million in wagers in January 2026 — a single-month record — and generated $57.8 million in gross gaming revenue at a 9.64% hold. Tax revenue to the state’s Water Plan Implementation Cash Fund hit a record $5.02 million for the month.

Colorado Sports Betting Bonuses Compared

Welcome bonuses in Colorado mirror the national market — no state-specific caps or carve-outs. Here’s how the four biggest Colorado sportsbooks stack up on minimum deposit, payout speed, live streaming, and loyalty programs. Current bonus offers change monthly, so always confirm terms on the operator’s site before depositing.

Feature FanDuel DraftKings BetMGM
Min Deposit$10$5$10
Payout Speed (PayPal)Under 24 hours1-2 days1-2 days
Live StreamingSelect eventsSelect eventsSelect events
Loyalty ProgramiRewardsDynasty RewardsMGM Rewards
Same Game ParlaySGP PlusYesOne-Game Parlay
Bonus offers change regularly. T&Cs apply. Always check the operator site for current terms.

Colorado Sports Betting Laws & Regulations

Colorado sports betting is governed by House Bill 19-1327 and the voter-approved Proposition DD (November 2019), with rulemaking authority vested in the Limited Gaming Control Commission and day-to-day enforcement handled by the Division of Gaming inside the Department of Revenue. The law is considered operator-friendly compared to states like New York (51% tax) or Pennsylvania (36%) — Colorado’s 10% flat rate on net proceeds is among the lowest in the country.

Tax Rate & Proposition DD

Colorado taxes sportsbook operators at 10% of net sports betting proceeds, defined as total wagers minus player winnings, minus promotional/free-bet deductions, minus the federal excise tax. That deduction structure — particularly the write-off of promotional credits — drew legislative scrutiny, and 2024’s Proposition JJ let the state keep all tax revenue above the original $29 million Prop DD cap rather than refunding it to taxpayers.

Revenue AllocationRecipient
First dollarDivision of Gaming administrative costs
6%Hold-harmless fund (casino tax offset)
RemainderWater Plan Implementation Cash Fund
Tax Rate10% of net sports betting proceeds

Regulatory Structure

The Limited Gaming Control Commission sets policy; the Division of Gaming licenses operators, approves rules, and publishes monthly revenue reports. Master licenses are tied to the three gaming towns — each licensed casino in Black Hawk, Central City, or Cripple Creek can sponsor up to one retail and one online sportsbook partner. That’s why you see national brands like FanDuel and DraftKings tethered to Colorado casino properties in the fine print of their Colorado apps.

What’s Prohibited

💡
Key Takeaway

Colorado’s 10% tax rate is why so many operators compete here — the margin economics work. For bettors, that competition translates into sharper lines, better promos, and more apps to line-shop than almost any other state. But pay attention to SB 131 in the 2026 session: it could cap advertising and restrict prop bets.

Online Casinos in Colorado

Online casinos are not legal in Colorado. You cannot legally play real-money online slots, blackjack, roulette, or live-dealer table games from anywhere inside state lines — full stop. Every “Colorado online casino” result you’ll find via search either points to sweepstakes sites (Chumba, LuckyLand, Stake.us), offshore unregulated operators (which carry real legal and financial risk), or the in-person casinos in Black Hawk, Central City, and Cripple Creek.

The political outlook for legalization is cold. A statewide survey in early 2026 found roughly 80% of Colorado voters opposed allowing online casino gambling through either legislation or ballot measure. The Colorado Gaming Association — the trade group representing Black Hawk and Cripple Creek casinos — has signaled interest in iGaming in past sessions, but the legislature’s current direction is actually toward more restrictions, not expansion.

In March 2026, the Colorado Senate advanced Senate Bill 131, which would impose new sports betting advertising limits, ban certain prop bets, and introduce mandatory deposit limits. A separate bill (SB26-117) would roll back the Colorado Lottery’s online sales expansion. Any online casino bill would have to swim against that legislative tide — and past a voter base that, per Amendment-1-style constitutional requirements, would likely need to approve gambling expansion at the ballot box anyway.

⚠️
Avoid Offshore Casino Sites

Any site advertising “Colorado online casino” real-money play is operating outside Division of Gaming oversight. You have no regulatory recourse if deposits vanish, winnings are voided, or identity data is mishandled. Stick to licensed Colorado sportsbooks for legal online gambling, or visit a physical casino in Black Hawk, Central City, Cripple Creek, Towaoc, or Ignacio for slots and table games.

Online Poker in Colorado

Online poker is not legal in Colorado. The state has never passed an online poker authorization bill, and Colorado is not part of the Multi-State Internet Gaming Agreement (MSIGA) that links New Jersey, Nevada, Michigan, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Delaware into shared player pools. If you want to play poker for real money in Colorado, you have two legal paths: live poker rooms at casinos in Black Hawk, Central City, and Cripple Creek (Ameristar, Bally’s, Golden Gates, and Monarch all spread cash games and tournaments), or the sweepstakes “social poker” sites, which technically operate under federal sweepstakes law rather than state gambling statutes.

Daily Fantasy Sports in Colorado

Daily fantasy sports are legal and regulated in Colorado. The state passed HB16-1404 in 2016, creating a licensing framework that classifies DFS as a game of skill rather than gambling. The Division of Gaming licenses operators, who must register annually, submit to audits, and offer self-exclusion tools. Minimum age is 18 for DFS — three years younger than sports betting.

Land-Based Casinos: Colorado’s Mountain Towns

Colorado has 33 land-based casinos: 31 commercial casinos in the three mountain gaming towns (Black Hawk, Central City, Cripple Creek) plus two tribal casinos in the southwest corner of the state. All commercial casinos operate under the Limited Gaming Act, originally passed by voters in 1990, and expanded by Amendments 50 (2008) and 77 (2020). Every commercial casino is within a roughly 90-minute drive of Denver or Colorado Springs, which is the single biggest reason Colorado’s gaming economy works.

Black Hawk

Black Hawk is the largest of the three mountain casino towns, with roughly 20 casinos concentrated along a one-mile stretch of Highway 119 in Gilpin County, about 40 miles west of Denver. It’s the market leader by revenue, handle, and hotel rooms — if you’re making a single Colorado casino trip, Black Hawk is the default.

Central City

Central City sits one mile uphill from Black Hawk on the original 1859 gold-rush road. It’s smaller (about six active casinos), quieter, and leans into historic-district charm — 19th-century opera house, preserved Victorian storefronts. Monarch Casino’s Central Station bus shuttles riders up from the Black Hawk parking decks.

Cripple Creek

Cripple Creek is the southern outpost — about 45 miles west of Colorado Springs in Teller County — with roughly 10 casinos clustered along Bennett Avenue. Bronco Billy’s (recently rebranded and expanded by Full House Resorts as Chamonix) is the anchor, with Century Casino and Triple Crown also drawing steady Colorado Springs traffic. The vibe is dustier and more authentically gold-rush than Black Hawk.

CasinoTownNotes
Ameristar Black HawkBlack HawkLargest casino in Colorado; 1,280 slots, 40 tables, 22-table poker room, AAA diamond hotel
Monarch Casino Resort SpaBlack Hawk23-story tower, high-stakes area, live poker, full-service spa
Bally’s Black HawkBlack Hawk560+ slots, 33 tables, state’s largest poker room
Horseshoe Black HawkBlack HawkCaesars Rewards property; strong table game mix
The Lodge CasinoBlack HawkMid-size slot floor, hotel tower, steakhouse
Monarch Central StationCentral CityShuttle hub and casino space linking Central City to Black Hawk
Century Casino Central CityCentral CitySlots-forward floor, historic building
Chamonix Casino HotelCripple CreekFull House Resorts’ expansion of Bronco Billy’s; Cripple Creek’s flagship
Century Casino Cripple CreekCripple CreekMid-size slot and table-game mix, hotel rooms
Triple Crown CasinosCripple CreekThree adjoining properties: Midnight Rose, Brass Ass, J.P. McGills

Tribal Casinos

Colorado has two tribal casinos, both in the southwest corner of the state roughly seven hours from Denver but within an hour or two of the Four Corners tourist loop. Each operates under a gaming compact with the State of Colorado rather than the Limited Gaming Act, which gives them some flexibility on game mix and bet limits.

Colorado Gambling History

Colorado’s gambling timeline starts with the 1859 Gold Rush and runs through six major voter-approved expansions. Every significant change to state gambling law has passed by ballot measure, not just legislation — a quirk of the Colorado constitution that makes online casino legalization particularly hard to push through without public support.

How to Sign Up & Place Your First Bet in Colorado

Signing up for a Colorado sportsbook takes about five minutes end-to-end. The process is remote — no in-person registration at a Black Hawk casino required — and the steps are identical across FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, Caesars, and every other licensed operator. You’ll need a valid government ID, a Social Security number (for identity verification and tax reporting), a physical Colorado address, and a funding method.

  1. Pick a licensed operator. Start with one of the four rating cards above. Confirm the app shows “Available in Colorado” in its App Store description.
  2. Download the app or visit the site. iOS and Android apps for major brands are in the official stores. Avoid “Colorado sportsbook” results in offshore app marketplaces.
  3. Create an account. Provide name, date of birth, last four of SSN, physical address (must match ID), email, and phone. The operator runs a soft ID check in the background.
  4. Enable location services. The app will prompt for GPS permission. Colorado geofencing uses GPS plus Wi-Fi triangulation — deny location and you can’t place bets.
  5. Fund the account. Minimum deposits range from $5 (DraftKings) to $20 (Caesars). Debit card and online banking are instant; PayPal and e-checks may take a few minutes.
  6. Claim your welcome offer if opt-in is required. Read the playthrough terms before depositing — bonus structures vary widely between brands.
  7. Place your first bet. Browse by sport (Broncos, Avalanche, Nuggets, Rockies, and Rapids all have their own pages), pick a wager, select stake, and confirm. The bet will appear in your open bets tab immediately.

Banking Options for Colorado Bettors

Colorado sportsbooks accept a standard menu of US deposit and withdrawal methods. Debit cards and online banking (ACH/e-check) are universal. PayPal is supported by every major operator except a few tribal-adjacent apps. Cash deposits at retail sportsbook cages in Black Hawk and Cripple Creek are also available if you’re already at the property.

Credit-card deposits are restricted — most Colorado operators have disabled credit-card funding entirely in line with national responsible-gambling best practices. Cryptocurrency deposits are not accepted at any licensed Colorado sportsbook. For a deeper look at deposit options across operators, see our banking guide.

Responsible Gambling in Colorado

If gambling stops being fun, Colorado has real resources — and using them is free and confidential. The Colorado Department of Revenue operates a voluntary self-exclusion list that bars you from all licensed casinos and sportsbooks for one year, five years, or lifetime. Every licensed Colorado sportsbook app also offers in-app deposit limits, session-time limits, and cooling-off periods that take effect immediately.

Please read our Responsible Gambling page for a full breakdown of warning signs, treatment options, and national resources. Sports betting is entertainment with risk, not an income source — treat it that way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is online gambling legal in Colorado?

Sports betting and daily fantasy sports are legal and regulated in Colorado. Online casinos and online poker are not legal. Sports betting launched May 1, 2020, after voters approved Proposition DD in November 2019.

What is the minimum age to gamble in Colorado?

You must be 21 or older to place sports bets or gamble at any Colorado casino. Daily fantasy sports and the Colorado Lottery have an 18+ minimum age.

What sportsbooks are available in Colorado?

More than two dozen licensed sportsbooks operate in Colorado, including FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, Caesars, BetRivers, Fanatics, ESPN BET, bet365, and Hard Rock Bet. Every licensed operator is tethered to a casino property in Black Hawk, Central City, or Cripple Creek.

What is the Colorado sports betting tax rate?

Colorado taxes sportsbook operators at 10% of net sports betting proceeds (handle minus winnings, minus promotional deductions, minus the federal excise tax). Revenue after administrative costs and a 6% hold-harmless fund is directed to the Water Plan Implementation Cash Fund.

When did Colorado remove the $100 bet limit at casinos?

Voters approved Amendment 77 in November 2020, removing the state-imposed $100 maximum bet. The three gaming towns (Black Hawk, Central City, Cripple Creek) then approved local measures to eliminate limits entirely. Expanded gaming with no state bet cap began May 1, 2021.

Play Safe: Gambling should be fun, not stressful. Set limits, stick to your budget, and never chase losses. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call 1-800-270-7117 or visit ncpgambling.org. For more resources, see our Responsible Gambling page.

Neighboring States

Colorado borders seven states, and the gambling laws vary dramatically across the state line. If you’re close to a border, make sure your geolocation shows you’re physically inside the correct state before placing a wager — using a VPN or betting from across a border is a violation of operator terms and state law.

For full coverage of state-by-state gambling laws, visit our US gambling laws hub, or start with our Sports Betting Guide for a deeper look at how legal wagering works across the country.