With lawmakers divided and sweepstakes casinos still operating in legal limbo, Indiana’s iGaming future may hinge on how far the legislature is willing to go this session.
Split Over Sweeps Could Be a Backdoor to iGaming
The latest attempt to ban online sweepstakes casinos in Indiana is doing more than targeting a legally murky gambling model—it’s reigniting a broader debate over whether the state should finally regulate online casinos.
At a House Public Policy Committee hearing this week, House Bill 1052 came under scrutiny. The bill seeks to define and outlaw sweepstakes-style gaming, which has flourished by using a two-currency system that sidesteps Indiana’s current gambling laws. But not everyone is sold on an outright ban.
While the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Ethan Manning, and the Indiana Gaming Commission (IGC) back prohibition, several committee members raised doubts. Rep. Kim Lucas voiced concerns about punishing operators who’ve found a legal workaround simply because Indiana hasn’t kept up. “Just because we don’t have our ducks in a row… we should [not] punish them by outright banning them,” she said.
The state’s top gaming lawyer, IGC General Counsel Natalie Huffman, admitted the law doesn’t give the commission clear authority to go after sweepstakes casinos. “The multi-currency model is what allows it to operate outside of our current regulatory scheme,” she explained.
Calls for Regulation, Not Rejection
Representatives from the sweepstakes industry are pushing back hard against the ban—and offering a different path. At both the committee hearing and the recent National Council of Legislators from Gaming States winter meeting, sweepstakes leaders made it clear: they want regulation, not prohibition.
Jeff Duncan, director of the Social Gaming Leadership Association, argued for a licensed system that would bring tax revenue to the state and establish player protections. “We want to be regulated. We want to pay taxes,” he said.
Some lawmakers are listening. Rep. Jim Lucas and Rep. Steve Bartels each floated amendments that would scrap the ban in favor of regulation. Bartels’ proposal, in particular, would establish a licensing framework—marking a significant shift from the original bill’s intent.
The SGLA estimates a legal sweepstakes industry could contribute over $20 million annually to Indiana’s coffers, an appealing figure as budget season looms.
iGaming Back on the Table
While HB 1052 dominates headlines, the real story may be what’s riding in its wake: renewed interest in legalizing online casinos in Indiana.
Rep. Kyle Miller introduced an amendment to the sweepstakes bill proposing iGaming legalization. His logic? Give people a regulated, legitimate alternative, and the sweepstakes model loses steam. “They’re able to do this because we’ve not passed a legal framework for iGaming,” he said.
Last year, Manning’s separate online casino bill cleared the Public Policy Committee but never saw a floor vote. House Speaker Todd Huston shot it down, and Ways and Means never gave it a hearing. This year feels different. Huston and Senate President Rodric Bray have both signaled a more open stance.
Meanwhile, the committee did advance HB 1078, a separate bill to legalize iLottery, by a 9-3 vote—a sign that digital gaming measures aren’t dead on arrival.
Pressure Mounts as Other States Move
The backdrop to all this is a growing national push to crack down on sweepstakes-style operators. Six states banned the model last year, and nine—including Indiana—are weighing new restrictions in 2026.
But Indiana’s hesitancy to pull the trigger may stem from deeper concerns: competition with brick-and-mortar casinos, fears of increased problem gambling, and a still-fresh political scandal tied to the state’s gaming sector.
Even so, the tide may be turning. As Rep. Jim Lucas put it, “It’s incumbent upon us to find a way to make this work, because I don’t think we should be in the business of picking winners and losers.”
With hearings set to continue and amendments still in play, Indiana’s legislative session—ending in mid-March—could be a defining moment for the state’s gambling future. Whether lawmakers ban, regulate, or fully embrace online play, the fight over sweepstakes may end up being the key that finally unlocks Indiana’s iGaming market.










