Virginia’s online casino effort is off the table for 2026 after lawmakers ran out of road in conference, even as several other gambling measures kept moving.
Conference Talks Run Aground
Virginia lawmakers failed to bring House Bill 161 and Senate Bill 118 into line before the General Assembly session closed, ending this year’s attempt to legalise online casino play in the state.
The two bills had already done the hard part by clearing both chambers after a bruising path through the legislature. HB 161 only arrived in January, then survived thanks to a late vote flip in the House before the proposal made it through the Senate in February. That momentum still was not enough to get the package over the line.
The sticking point came in conference committee, where negotiators could not settle the remaining differences between the House and Senate versions. With no compromise bill in hand before the deadline, the entire effort is now dead for the year and would have to start from scratch in a future session.
Same Framework, Different Priorities
On the broad outline, the bills were fairly close. Both backed a regulated iGaming market overseen by the Virginia Lottery Board. Each of the state’s land-based casinos would have been allowed to partner with up to three online brands, with a $2m platform fee and a $500,000 initial licence cost attached.
Both measures also set a 20% tax on adjusted gross gaming revenue.
Where things got messy was the split over who gets what and how brick-and-mortar casinos would be protected if online play starts eating into on-site business. HB 161 included language aimed at cushioning job losses tied to online gaming. SB 118 did not.
The House bill also proposed an extra 6% economic development fee to fund a “Hold Harmless” account, designed to compensate casinos for losses blamed on online competition. That was one of the points lawmakers could not smooth over.
For the average Virginia player, the result is simple enough: no legal online blackjack, slots or roulette app is coming any time soon.
Red Tape Did Not Help
A House fiscal review also flagged practical headaches inside the proposed framework. Operators would have needed to file separate notices for each platform, and the timeline written into the bills left room for administrative delays.
At the same time, a related effort to build a unified gambling regulator also fell apart during the conference process. That matters because online casino legislation is a much tougher sell when the wider regulatory structure still looks unfinished.
Taken together, the collapse of the main iGaming bills and the failure of supporting reforms leave Virginia with a familiar gambling story: interest is there, but agreement on the fine print is not.
Opponents Claim a Win
Anti-iGaming groups wasted no time celebrating.
Oliver Barie, spokesman for the National Alliance Against Internet Gambling, praised lawmakers for stopping the bills and said the state had avoided putting casino-style gambling on every phone.
That line has been central to the opposition campaign from the start. Critics argued that round-the-clock mobile casino access would bring a higher risk of problem gambling, put more pressure on household finances and pull spending away from physical casinos and surrounding local businesses.
Those arguments clearly still carry weight in Richmond, especially when the margins on earlier votes were already tight.
Other Gambling Bills Did Survive
While online casino legislation stalled, other gaming measures had a better week.
Lawmakers approved a bill authorising a land-based casino in Fairfax County, though that project still needs voter approval before anything concrete happens. The General Assembly also moved ahead with a ban on using credit cards for sports betting and tightened the rules around certain daily fantasy sports contests.
So Virginia did not shut the door on gambling expansion across the board. It just decided online casino was one step too far for now.
What Happens Next
The issue is unlikely to disappear, but it may sit on the shelf for a while. The narrow votes, the unresolved fight over tax distribution and the pushback from opponents all point to the same conclusion: any future iGaming bill will need a much cleaner compromise before it has a real shot.
Until then, Virginia players looking for legal gambling options are still limited to the channels already on the books. For online casino supporters, this was less a dramatic collapse than a slow legislative shrug.










