Super Betting

More than 50 million people in the U.S. will bet on the Super Bowl being held for the first time in Arizona, a state where sports betting is legal. It's clear that Americans have accepted legal sports betting

Super Betting

With Super Bowl LVII around the corner, football fans across America are gearing up to place their bets on the big game. According to new American Gaming Association (AGA) research, a record 50 million Americans plan to bet a collective $16 billion dollars on this weekend’s matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles.

This year’s Super Bowl, hosted in Arizona, will be the first to be played in a state with legal sports wagering. 2023 will also be the first year in which more than half of American Adults (57 percent) have access to legal sportsbooks in their home state.

With the expansion of legal wagering, traditional Super Bowl bettors are expected to exceed casual bettors for the first time ever. 30 million American adults plan to place a traditional sports wager online, at a retail sportsbook or with a bookie (up 66 percent from 2022), while 28 million plan to bet casually with friends or as part of a pool or squares contest (up 50 percent from 2022)—and of course many will do both.

These figures tell a familiar story: Americans want legal betting options and are taking advantage of the protections of the regulated market when they are available. Seven-in-ten adults who plan to bet on Super bowl LVII say it is important that they place bets only through legal, licensed operators, and that number rises to 74 percent among adults in legal sports betting states.

Legal wagering also continues to drive fan engagement with leagues, teams and media properties: more than a third (34 percent) of NFL fans say that the expansion of legal wagering has made watching an NFL game more exciting.

As the legal market grows, everyone involved in the sports betting ecosystem must maintain their commitment to providing consumers with the knowledge and tools to bet responsibly. The AGA is helping lead these efforts through our Have A Game Plan.®Bet Responsibly™  campaign, which is bringing together the broader sports betting industry—including NFL team partners Washington Commanders and New York Jets—around responsible gaming education and messaging.

Importantly, the industry’s education efforts continue to resonate:

  • The overwhelming majority of traditional Super Bowl bettors (71 percent) report seeing a responsible gaming message in the last year.
  • More importantly, younger Americans (under 35 years old) are more likely to recall seeing a responsible gaming message and younger bettors are more likely to say it is important to only wager legally.

By doubling down on our investments in responsibility, we will continue to build a safe, sustainable product that doesn’t repeat the mistakes that have impeded the long-term health of some overseas markets.

Find more Super Bowl LVII wagering trends below:

  • • Bettors are evenly split on the outcome of the game with 44 percent each planning to bet on the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs.
  • • Eagles and Chiefs fans are equally likely to bet this year: about one-third of each fanbase say they’ll wager on the game.
  • • More women (11 percent) say they will bet this year compared to last year (7 percent).
  • • GenZ and Millennials are nearly twice as likely to bet as GenX and three times as likely as Boomers.

Articles by Author: David Forman

David Forman is vice president of research for the American Gaming Association