Georgia Sports Betting: Why It Keeps Failing and What’s Different This Year

Georgia keeps coming up short on legal sports betting. A new bill offers a different path, but major hurdles still remain.
Georgia Sports Betting Faces Another Crucial Year

Georgia is home to five major professional sports teams, some of the most passionate sports fans in the country, and a state lottery that generates billions for education. It’s also one of the few large states in America where sports betting is still completely illegal. Four years of attempts. Four years of failure. So what keeps going wrong — and could 2026 finally be different? Let’s break it down.

Why Georgia Keeps Striking Out

Most states legalize sports betting through regular legislation — lawmakers vote, the governor signs, done. Georgia hasn’t been that simple. For years, the dominant view in the state legislature was that legalizing sports betting would require a constitutional amendment, which in Georgia means a statewide referendum — essentially putting it on the ballot for voters to decide.

That process is slow, expensive, and politically risky. It requires two-thirds approval in both chambers of the legislature before it even gets to voters. Religious groups and social conservatives have repeatedly blocked it, and with enough opposition in the statehouse, the supermajority vote simply couldn’t be assembled.

There’s also been the perennial fight over who controls the revenue. Georgia’s lottery already funds the HOPE Scholarship and pre-K programs — beloved, politically untouchable programs. Any sports betting bill that looks like it might eat into lottery revenue gets nervous looks from lawmakers and education advocates alike.

Enter House Bill 910 — The Lottery Workaround

The bill back on the table in 2026 is House Bill 910, introduced by Republican Rep. Matt Hatchett. HB 910 has been kicking around since April 2025, when it was first filed and immediately stalled. It’s now been carried over into the 2026 session under Georgia’s two-year legislative process, and it’s sitting in the House Higher Education Committee.

Here’s the key twist that makes this bill different from previous attempts: HB 910 does not require a constitutional amendment or a voter referendum. Instead, it legalizes sports betting by placing it under the authority of the Georgia Lottery Corporation — which already operates legally under state law. The argument is that if the lottery can run scratch-off tickets and Powerball, it can regulate sports betting too, without changing the constitution.

Not everyone buys that logic. Some lawmakers still insist a constitutional amendment is necessary, and that legal argument hasn’t been resolved. But it’s the core innovation of this bill — a potential path around the biggest roadblock that’s killed previous efforts.

What HB 910 Would Look Like in Practice

If passed, here’s how Georgia sports betting would work under HB 910:

  • Who’s in charge: The Georgia Lottery Corporation would regulate everything. No new agency needed.
  • How many sportsbooks: The lottery could issue up to 18 licenses to online operators. The Georgia Lottery itself gets one, and it can hand out seven more through a public selection process. The remaining licenses would go to entities tied to specific sports organizations.
  • Which teams get in: Each of Georgia’s professional sports teams — the Atlanta Braves, Atlanta Falcons, Atlanta Hawks, Atlanta Dream, and Atlanta United FC — would be eligible for a license. Augusta National Golf Course, the PGA Tour, Atlanta Motor Speedway, and the National Steeplechase Association also make the list.
  • The tax rate: 25% on adjusted gross wagering revenue — on the higher end nationally, but not the highest.
  • The cost to get in: Operators would pay a $100,000 nonrefundable application fee plus $1.5 million annually to keep their license. These are steep enough to keep the market from getting crowded with small players.
  • Online only: No physical betting locations, no sportsbook windows at stadiums. Everything is through apps and websites.

Why the Prediction Market Boom Is Creating New Urgency

There’s a new factor pushing Georgia lawmakers to act: the explosive growth of prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket. These federally-regulated platforms allow people to bet on sports outcomes framed as “event contracts” — and they’ve been operating in Georgia (and most other states) while traditional sportsbooks cannot.

Lawmakers watching Georgia residents use these platforms are facing an uncomfortable reality: people are already betting on sports in Georgia. They’re just doing it through a loophole that sends zero tax revenue to the state and bypasses all the consumer protections that regulated sportsbooks provide.

That urgency creates pressure to act — but the window may be closing. Georgia’s legislative session runs on a tight calendar, and if the bill doesn’t advance out of committee soon, it could die again for a fifth straight year.

What to Realistically Expect

Even optimists aren’t fully convinced. The House gaming study committee declined to make any recommendations last year. Gov. Brian Kemp has expressed openness to regulated gambling if it benefits education, but hasn’t been a visible advocate. The constitutional amendment debate hasn’t gone away.

If HB 910 somehow passes, expect a 6-12 month rulemaking period before any apps go live — meaning Georgia bettors probably wouldn’t be wagering legally until late 2026 or 2027 at the earliest.

Georgia Betting is Taking a Hit

Georgia sports betting has failed four consecutive times for real, structural reasons — not just bad luck. HB 910 takes the most creative swing yet at getting around those obstacles. But until it actually gets a vote and clears the legislature, Georgia fans will keep watching from the sidelines while the rest of the country bets legally.

Aaron White Bio Avatar

Aaron White


Sports Betting Contributor

Aaron White graduated from Northwestern University with a B.A. in Economics. His industry experience includes projects for the Chicago Cubs, The Sporting News, and QL Gaming Group. At Hello Rookie, he covers the NFL and NBA from a betting and DFS perspective.