Nevada’s February betting report points to a slower month, with lighter wagering, lower revenue, and one clear culprit: a Super Bowl that failed to bring its usual punch.
Super Bowl Buzz Never Really Arrived
Nevada’s sports betting market lost some steam in February 2026, and the Super Bowl had a lot to do with it. Total handle slipped below $600 million, while sportsbook revenue fell 14.4% year over year to $35.4 million. The hold rate also dipped, sliding from 6.8% to 6.1%. Even with the Big Game still producing about $10 million in revenue, betting interest was unusually soft, posting the event’s lowest handle since 2016. For a market that still leans heavily on big tourist-driven weekends, that kind of miss leaves a mark.
Basketball Carried the Load While Football Fell Apart
The split by sport tells the story fast enough. Football revenue dropped nearly 69% year over year to $4.3 million, a sharp fall from January and a big reason the monthly numbers came in flat. Basketball went the other way, generating $24.5 million in revenue, up 46% from last year, and easily led the board. Other sports such as golf, soccer, tennis, MMA, boxing, and auto racing brought in $7.3 million, down 18.6% from a year earlier but still good for second place. Hockey, meanwhile, landed in the red, which is never ideal unless you enjoy seeing the house lose for once.
March Could Change the Mood
There is still a decent chance this turns into a one-month wobble rather than something worse. March Madness remains one of the busiest stretches on the U.S. betting calendar, and Nevada books would welcome the lift after a sluggish February. For the average online casino and sportsbook player, the takeaway is pretty simple: football cooled off, basketball picked up the slack, and the market now needs a strong college hoops run to get its footing back.
Nevada Is Still A Giant, Just Not The Biggest One
Nevada remains one of the country’s most established betting states, but it is no longer the market-setting heavyweight by raw volume. New York and New Jersey have both moved past it in handle and revenue, helped by bigger populations and broader mobile access. New York alone regularly clears $1.5 billion in monthly wagers, which leaves Nevada looking more like an old pro than the flashy market leader. The state still benefits from brand power and Las Vegas tourism, though its reliance on in-person betting continues to look like a handicap as newer mobile-first markets pull in more action. Without broader online growth, Nevada’s slice of the pie may keep getting smaller even as sports betting nationwide keeps climbing.










