Online Poker in New York
New York has not legalized online poker. Live poker is alive and well at the state’s commercial and tribal casinos, while iGaming and online-poker bills keep stalling in Albany.
- ✓Live Poker: Legal
- ✗Online Poker: Not Licensed
- 📅Updated 2026
What’s Legal
- ✓Live poker at the four commercial casinos and tribal properties
- ✓Charitable poker tournaments licensed by NY Gaming Commission
- ✓Private home games with no rake or profit for the host (Penal Law §225.00)
- ✓Free-to-play / play-money poker apps
What’s Not Legal
- ✗Real-money online poker — no NY-licensed operators exist
- ✗Offshore sites (Bovada, ACR, Ignition) — unregulated and illegal under state law
- ✗Sweepstakes-poker redemptions (Global Poker, ClubWPT Gold) — banned by S5935 in Dec 2025
- ✗Underground / unlicensed cardrooms — class A misdemeanor (or felony if hosting)
Where to Play Poker in New York
Live rooms, social options, and platforms that are not available
The Push to Legalize NY Online Poker
Online poker has been on the table in Albany for more than a decade. Senator Joseph Addabbo Jr. (D-Queens) has reintroduced an iGaming bill — most recently S2614, paired with Assembly companion A4292 from Assemblymember J. Gary Pretlow — every session since 2023. The bill would license up to 10 online operators (including online poker) and add an estimated $1+ billion in annual tax revenue, but it has never reached a floor vote. Assemblymember J. Gary Pretlow has separately advanced House Bill 1380, which seeks to formally classify poker as a game of skill rather than a game of chance — the same legal logic that opened the door to legal daily fantasy sports in New York. Governor Kathy Hochul has signaled openness to expanding online gambling, but no poker bill has cleared both chambers.
- Constitutional hurdle: NY requires a constitutional amendment for new “house-banked” gambling — a 2-year, two-session process plus voter referendum. Poker’s “game of skill” status is a workaround the legislature is still debating.
- Tribal compacts: Oneida, Seneca, and Mohawk nations have exclusivity zones that complicate statewide online rollout.
- Casino jobs: Commercial casinos (Resorts World, MGM Empire City) worry online play will cannibalize live poker revenue.
- 2026 outlook: Industry analysts (Eilers & Krejcik, Legal Sports Report) currently rate NY iGaming/online-poker passage as unlikely before 2027 at the earliest.
Sources: New York State Senate (S2614), New York State Assembly (A4292), New York State Gaming Commission, NY Penal Law Article 225.
What NY Will Probably Look Like — A Look Across the Hudson
Only six U.S. states currently offer legal, regulated online poker: New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Nevada, Delaware, and West Virginia. Two of them border New York, so it’s a safe bet plenty of New Yorkers already cross the line to play — and a useful preview of what a regulated NY market would look like.
New Jersey has seven licensed online poker sites and the only requirement is being physically inside the state. Several operators already run NY-licensed sportsbooks under the same parent company:
- WSOP.com — operated by Caesars (which runs Caesars Sportsbook NY). Shares player liquidity with 888poker for bigger cash games.
- PokerStars — the largest U.S. real-money poker brand, partnered with Resorts International, which also runs an NY mobile sportsbook.
- BetMGM Poker & Borgata Poker — both part of the MGM family that operates BetMGM Sportsbook NY. Party Poker (also MGM) has been live in NJ since 2013.
- 888poker — sister brand of WSOP, smaller cash-game pool but strong tournaments.
- Pala Poker — the lone outlier with no current NY sportsbook affiliate, and the smallest of the NJ rooms.
None of these brands are licensed in New York yet. Information shown reflects their NJ products and is for context only.
Welcome Bonuses to Expect (Based on NJ Market)
If New York legalizes online poker, these are the kinds of welcome offers NJ players currently see — a reasonable preview of what should land in the Empire State.
WSOP.com
$10 no-deposit bonus
Up to $1,000 first-deposit match
PokerStars
$100 in free play after a $1 wager
100% deposit match up to $600
Borgata Poker / BetMGM Poker
$75 in tournament tickets
100% deposit match up to $1,000
888poker
$20 free, no deposit needed
First-deposit match up to $1,500
Bonus amounts reflect NJ offers as of late 2025 and are subject to change. Not available to NY residents.
Online Poker Game Types
Cash Games
The most popular formats at U.S. sites:
- No-Limit Hold’em (the headline game)
- Pot-Limit Omaha
- Omaha Hi/Lo (Eight or Better)
Tournaments
Common tournament structures include:
- Sit & Go’s
- Blast Sit & Go’s (jackpot SNGs)
- Spin & Go’s
- Multi-table tournaments (MTTs)
Video poker — not yet available in New York. Video poker lives inside online casinos, and NY hasn’t legalized iGaming.
Mobile Apps & Desktop Requirements
When NY does join the regulated market, expect the same mobile-first experience as sports betting. Major poker brands ship native apps for both iOS (App Store) and Android (Google Play), plus a downloadable desktop client and an instant-play browser version.
Standard requirements: a verified account (KYC), being physically inside the state at the time of play (geolocation plug-in for desktop, native GPS on mobile), and being 21+. The same geolocation tech NY sportsbooks already use will gate access for online poker.
Legal Alternatives While You Wait
Real-money online poker isn’t licensed in New York yet, but you can still bet legally. NY has nine licensed mobile sportsbooks and a healthy live-poker scene across the state.
Common questions about poker law and play in New York


