Nevada Sports Betting Handle, Revenue Plummet in February

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Lackluster Super Bowl wagering led to significant sports betting handle and revenue decreases in February compared to the previous year.  

Key Takeaways

  • Nevada’s monthly handle fell below $700 million for the first time since August 2025.
  • Super Bowl wagering reached its lowest since 2016.
  • Revenue took a 14.4% year-over-year tumble in February.  

The Nevada Gaming Control Board reported on Thursday that Silver State online and retail sportsbooks suffered a 4.1% year-over-year handle drop, leading to $579.6 million in February wagering. 

Super Bowl betting was Nevada’s lowest since 2016 and failed to reach $135 million for the first time since 2017. That greatly affected the overall handle, which fell below $700 million for the first time since August 2025.

The $412.8-million Nevada online sports betting handle dipped by the same percentage as the overall handle and accounted for 71.2% of all bets.  

Profits fall

Nevada revenue took an even bigger hit, falling 14.4% year-over-year to $35.4 million. Nearly $10 million of that total profit came from the Super Bowl between the Seahawks and Patriots.

Sportsbooks’ 6.1% monthly hold was down from February 2025’s 6.8% win rate. Volumes in Clark County, where Las Vegas is located, 4.6%, and the hold matched the entire state’s win rate.    

Sport breakdown

Sport February Revenue YoY Change
Football $4.3 million  -68.8%
Basketball $24.5 million  46.2%
Other $7.3 million  -18.6%
Hockey -$162K  -107.3%

Sportsbooks made $4.3 million from football in February, a nearly 69% year-over-year dip. It was also a big change from January when operators hauled in over $28 million in revenue from the sport. 

Basketball produced the most revenue, reaching $24.5 million. That was up 46% from the previous year and about $3 million more than January’s profits. The “other” sports, which include auto racing, golf, soccer, tennis, MMA, and boxing, dipped 18.6% year over year, but it was the second-highest moneymaker for operators with $7.3 million in revenue. 

Sportsbooks finished in the red on hockey and baseball in February, totaling over $660,000 in losses. 

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

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