New York lawmakers are considering a bill that would push a monthly betting “receipt” to every mobile sportsbook customer, making it a lot harder to ignore what the app has been quietly keeping score of all along.
The proposal: mandatory monthly account statements
Assembly Bill A10329, filed February 24, 2026, by Assemblymember Rebecca Kassay and sent to the Assembly’s Standing Committee on Racing and Wagering, would update New York’s racing, pari-mutuel wagering, and breeding law to require monthly electronic statements for every authorized sports bettor.
If it passes, licensed operators like FanDuel and DraftKings would have to deliver the statement by mobile push notification within 15 days after each month ends. Bettors would also be able to pull up those statements anytime inside their accounts.
What the statement has to spell out
The bill calls for a blunt month-by-month breakdown, including: total deposits, total amount wagered, and the number of bets placed. It also requires totals for wins and losses, plus the net result (up or down).
One of the more personal details: sportsbooks would need to report how long a user spent logged into the app during the month. The measure also demands an itemized list of promotional credits, bonuses, and free wagers used, so the “bonus bet glow” doesn’t hide the real math.
Why this matters for the average bettor
Right now, plenty of apps make it easy to see your last bet and harder to see the bigger picture. A forced monthly snapshot works more like a bank statement: it lands in front of you whether you went looking for it or not.
For casual players, that could be a reality check. For heavy bettors, it’s a recurring nudge to notice patterns before they turn into problems.
Built-in responsible gaming reminders
Each monthly statement would also have to include clear info on New York’s responsible gaming resources, including problem gambling help and the state’s voluntary self-exclusion program.
Lifetime betting history, on demand
A10329 goes beyond monthly summaries by requiring direct access to a customer’s full lifetime wagering history. Many books already store this data, but the bill would make customer access a legal requirement rather than an app feature that can be buried or redesigned away.
The Gaming Commission gets a new job
The bill would also put the New York State Gaming Commission in charge of setting rules on standard format and clarity, with the goal of keeping operators from presenting key figures in a confusing way.
Timing and what comes next
If both chambers pass the bill and Gov. Kathy Hochul signs it, the requirements would kick in on January 1 of the year after enactment (the current draft points to January 1, 2027). That gives New York’s eight licensed mobile sportsbooks a set runway to update their systems.
Next stop is the Assembly Racing and Wagering Committee, which will decide whether A10329 moves forward.
How it stacks up against other states
New York’s approach is more direct than Massachusetts, where detailed statements are generally provided when a bettor asks. New Jersey, meanwhile, has been leaning toward policy ideas like restricting credit card use and formalizing responsible gaming leadership at operators, rather than sending everyone a monthly push summary.
If New York goes the push-notification route, it could become a model other states watch, especially as lawmakers keep tightening consumer protection rules across the country.










