New Jersey Senate Committee Advances Three Gambling Harm Bills, Including Account Restriction Transparency Rule

New Jersey lawmakers advanced bills requiring sportsbooks to explain account restrictions and making bettors watch problem gambling videos before exiting self-exclusion programs.
New Jersey's Senate

New Jersey’s Senate committee advanced three gambling protection bills on Thursday, each targeting a different aspect of how licensed operators interact with players who may be experiencing gambling-related harm. The measures — which must still pass both chambers and be signed by the governor — represent one of the more substantive pushes on player protection from any established US gambling market this year.

New Jersey is the third-largest legal sports betting market in the country and has one of the most developed online casino ecosystems. The state’s April 2026 gaming revenue exceeded $600 million for the first time since 2012, driven by robust iGaming performance. The scale of the market has made New Jersey an important testing ground for responsible gambling policy, and the bills advanced Thursday would introduce new procedural requirements that could serve as a model for other states.

The Three Bills Explained

The first bill would require any casino or sportsbook that imposes limits or restrictions on a player’s account to provide a written explanation of why those restrictions were imposed. This is a significant change from current practice, where operators in New Jersey can restrict accounts without providing specific reasons — a source of frustration for bettors who find their accounts limited without clear recourse.

The second measure targets New Jersey’s voluntary self-exclusion program. Currently, players who added themselves to the exclusion list can request removal without any mandatory educational component. The new bill would require those players to watch informational videos explaining the risks of gambling and the resources available for problem gamblers before their exclusion is lifted.

The third bill would direct the state to commission a study examining whether specific language used in gambling advertisements actually deters harmful or illegal behavior. The research would give regulators an evidence base for evaluating whether existing warnings work and where changes might be needed.

Where This Fits in the National Picture

New Jersey’s action fits within a broader wave of consumer protection legislation that is emerging as the US gambling market matures. Colorado recently passed the first-in-nation sports betting deposit limit bill, which is now heading to the governor. Ontario launched a cross-platform self-exclusion system called BetGuard that allows players to remove themselves from all 82 regulated sites in under five minutes. And a bipartisan federal bill, the GAME Act, would ban gambling advertising that targets minors with fines of up to $100,000 per ad.

For bettors in New Jersey, the bills do not change anything immediately — they still need to clear the full Senate and Assembly. But the direction of travel is clear: states with mature gambling markets are increasingly turning their attention from market expansion to consumer protection. New Jersey bettors who want to know more about what sportsbooks are currently available and how they handle player accounts can review options at New Jersey sports betting for the current licensed operator landscape.

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Ernie Horn Bio Avatar

Ernie Horn


Sports Betting Contributor

Ernie is a 25-year veteran of the newspaper industry. He spent those early years working as a sports reporter and editor, but made the move back to the digital world in 2022. Ernie covers college football and NFL betting for Hello Rookie.