Maine’s move to greenlight tribal-run online casinos has injected new momentum into a national debate over who will control the fast-growing iGaming market, heightening legislative activity in state capitols and prompting legal and industry pushback.
Governor Janet Mills announced on January 8, 2026 that she would allow LD 1164 – An Act to Create Economic Opportunity for the Wabanaki Nations – to become law, authorizing four federally recognized tribes to operate online casino platforms in Maine and to partner with licensed third-party providers. The administration framed the measure as an economic development step for tribal communities; tribal leaders called it a “milestone for self-determination.” The governor’s office said regulators will set rules to protect consumers and public health as the marketplace is built. Maine Governor’s Office press release.
A wave of state action and revived bills
The Maine law makes the state the eighth in the U.S. to permit regulated real-money online casinos and comes amid a broader flurry of proposals this legislative season. In early January 2026 lawmakers in New York and Virginia reintroduced comprehensive iGaming bills that would open their large markets to regulated online casino operators under different licensing and tax schemes. Industry trackers report multiple other states – from Indiana to Massachusetts and New Hampshire – are also advancing or considering measures to legalize and tax internet casino games, with proponents citing potential revenue for education and problem-gambling programs.
That legislative momentum reflects two factors: steady consumer demand for online slots and table games and the fiscal appeal of higher-margin iGaming revenue after years of sports betting rollouts. Regulators and lawmakers face competing policy questions – market structure, taxation levels, consumer protections, and how to balance commercial operators, tribal sovereignty, and incumbent brick-and-mortar casinos.
Legal fights and industry friction
Maine’s exclusive-tribal model has already prompted a predictable legal challenge. Commercial operators and some casino owners argue the law unfairly excludes existing commercial casinos and amounts to a race-based monopoly; at least one facility has filed suit seeking to block the law’s implementation. Industry groups opposing tribal exclusivity warn of unintended consequences for workers and regional casinos, while tribal officials and supporters counter that the policy corrects long-standing inequities and channels previously illegal play into regulated channels.
Operators and platform providers are likewise recalibrating strategies. Some national gaming firms have signaled interest in partnering with tribes or state-licensed casinos where allowed; others are lobbying legislatures to favor open, competitive markets with multiple operator skins per license – a model that has emerged in states with fully commercial iGaming markets.
What to watch next
Regulators in Maine must complete rulemaking before a launch can occur – the law specifies implementation timing tied to the legislature’s adjournment and subsequent rulemaking windows – and the federal lawsuit could delay rollout. Meanwhile, floor battles in statehouses from Albany to Richmond this spring will determine whether larger East Coast markets open, and whether states adopt exclusive tribal models, open commercial markets, or hybrid approaches.
For consumers and investors the key near-term indicators will be: the outcome of Maine’s litigation and rulemaking, bill progress in New York and Virginia in the coming months, and whether states adopt tax and licensing structures that encourage multiple operators or favor single-provider or tribal-exclusive regimes. Those choices will shape how fast nationwide iGaming expansion proceeds and who captures the biggest share of an industry still sprinting toward mainstream adoption.
