Newsletter Subscribe
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Wyoming’s sports betting market cooled slightly in Q2 2025, with handle (total wagers) dropping from Q1’s record-setting pace. But even with a dip in wagers, the state actually collected more tax revenue in Q2, thanks to stronger margins.
| Quarter | Handle | GGR | Taxable Rev | Taxes Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 2025 | $63,042,680 | $6,143,432 | $3,562,967 | $361,711 |
| Q2 2025 | $45,148,357 | $5,887,859 | $4,225,370 | $422,537 |
Key takeaway: Wagers fell by about $18 million from Q1 to Q2 (no football), but tax revenue jumped 17%. Wyoming sportsbooks didn’t take as much action, but they held onto more of it.
Here’s how each sportsbook stacked up for April through June:
So, Wyoming bettors slowed down in spring, but the sportsbooks made their money stretch further, padding the state’s coffers in the process.
DraftKings isn’t just the leader in Wyoming; they’re running laps around the competition. FanDuel is comfortably in second, while BetMGM and Fanatics are battling for third-place relevance. Caesars, meanwhile, is playing a very quiet hand. With the 2025 football season about to begin, it is safe to assume a new challenger to DraftKings is not coming any time soon. ESPNBet has a Wyoming license, but it appears to be gathering dust.
The state, however, is the real winner with over $800,000 in tax revenue collected so far in 2025. Wyoming’s wide-open online sports betting market is proving it can deliver a steady payout.
AntlersArch founder and the voice behind Teton Tattle.