Sports

Here’s How Much MI Residents Are Wagering On Sports

In Michigan, nearly all sports markets are open to betting.

A majority of Americans think sports gambling — which is legal in Michigan and all but about a dozen other U.S. jurisdictions — “lessens the integrity of the game,” according to a recent poll.

A majority of respondents to the NBC News Decision Desk poll released late last year also found that a majority of respondents think the increasing availability of sports gambling “will lead to games being fixed or rigged.”

Gamblers in Michigan have wagered $22 billion on sports from January through mid-November 2025, according to a running tally of wagers kept by Legal Sports Report, which provides news, analysis and data on legal online sports vetting.

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The NBC poll was conducted from Nov. 20 to Dec. 8, within weeks of major sports gambling scandals involving professional basketball and baseball players.

NBA journeyman Terry Rozier was arrested on Oct. 23 for allegedly conspiring with gamblers, providing inside information for bets on his performance, and even feigning injury to exit a game early to help bettors wagering on him failing statistical benchmarks. Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz were arrested in November, accused of conspiring with gamblers who wagered on individual pitches they threw during games.

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In 2018 the U.S. Supreme Court opened the floodgate to legalized sports gambling when it struck down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act. The 1992 law barred state-authorized sports gambling, making Nevada the only state where a person could wager on the results of a single game.

Now, 40 states and the District of Columbia have some form of legalized sport gambling.

Michigan is one of those states. Additionally, nearly all sports markets are open, including college sports and college player prop bets, which wages an individual athlete's performance.

A better does not need to live in Michigan to gamble, but you must be physically inside the state when placing the bet. You must also be at least 21 years old.

In 2024, sports bets at old-school brick-and-mortar sportsbooks or a new crop of legal online channels brought in $13,71 billion in revenue in 2024, up $11.04 billion from 2023, according to the American Gaming Association.

So far this year, Michigan bets so far have brought in $2.1 billion, according to Legal Sports Report.

As wagering stands now, Michigan is just outside the top ten at No. 11 in the amount of money wagered. The top 10 states for sports gambling are:

  1. New York
  2. New Jersey
  3. Illinois
  4. Nevada
  5. Pennsylvania
  6. Arizona
  7. Colorado
  8. Virginia
  9. Indiana
  10. Ohio

It’s not just the integrity of MLB, NFL, NBA and other leagues with official gambling partners at stake. In September, the NCAA banned three men’s college basketball players who share thousands of dollars in payouts after betting on their own games at Fresno State and San Jose State.

The NCAA has strict rules regarding participation in sports wagering and prohibits student athletes, coaches, or athletics staff members from providing information that could influence a bet in any sport the NCAA sponsors at any level.

However, beginning Nov. 1, the NCAA allowed athletes and athletic department staff members to bet on professional sports. Although it has long held that sports gambling threatens the well-being of student athletes and the integrity of competition, the NCAA concedes that placing wagers on the outcome is one of the ways fans consume sports,

“This change recognizes the realities of today’s sports environment without compromising our commitment to protecting the integrity of college competition or the well-being of student-athletes,” Roberta Page, director of athletics at Slippery Rock and chair of the Division II Management Council, told ESPN.

Even youth sports aren’t immune. It’s illegal to bet on youth sports in the United States, but offshore sportsbooks saw a rapid rise in Little League World Series bets. None of the other jurisdictions where the organization operates permits wagering on youth sports.

Citing the ethical concerns of placing wagers on a game involving 12-year-olds, Little League International strongly condemned a rapid rise in Little League World Series bets. None of the other jurisdictions where the organization operates permits wagering on youth sports.

“While Little League International continues to monitor the complexity and ever-evolving world of sports betting, we feel strongly that there is no place for betting on Little League games or on any youth sports competition. Little League is a trusted place where children are learning the fundamentals of the games and all the important life lessons that come with having fun, celebrating teamwork, and playing with integrity, and no one should be exploiting the success and failures of children playing the game they love for their own personal gain,” the organization said in a statement earlier this year.

What do you think about the growth of sports betting? Do you think it compromises the integrity of the game? Join the conversation in the comments below.

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