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Nebraska casino operators have launched a formal petition campaign to bring mobile sports betting to the 2026 state ballot, targeting 300,000 voter signatures and a July 2025 submission deadline. Warhorse Casino CEO Lance Morgan leads the charge, citing internal polling that shows 70% public approval for the measure. If the effort succeeds, Nebraskans could place legal mobile bets in time for March Madness 2026, while the state collects an estimated $3 million per month in new tax revenue.
Nebraska’s initiative petition process requires organizers to collect signatures from at least 5% of registered voters who participated in the most recent general election. That threshold translates to approximately 300,000 valid signatures, a substantial but achievable target given that similar drives have succeeded in the state before. Organizers must submit completed petitions by July 2025 to qualify the measure for the November 2026 general election ballot [1].
The campaign is being driven by casino operators already active in Nebraska’s limited brick-and-mortar gambling market. Warhorse Casino, which operates in Lincoln, sits at the center of the effort. The July deadline is not arbitrary: clearing it early enough would allow the Nebraska Legislature to authorize mobile betting infrastructure in time for March Madness 2026, one of the highest-volume sports betting events on the American calendar.
Nebraska currently permits retail sports wagering at licensed casinos following a 2020 constitutional amendment approved by voters. Mobile betting, however, remains prohibited, leaving Nebraska residents to either visit a physical casino or use offshore platforms that operate outside state regulation.
Lance Morgan, CEO of Warhorse Casino, has become the most visible advocate for the petition campaign. Morgan told reporters that internal polling conducted by the campaign shows roughly 70% of Nebraska voters support legalizing mobile sports betting, a figure the campaign is using to justify the resource investment required for a statewide signature drive [1].
Internal campaign polling carries inherent bias risks, and independent verification of the 70% figure has not been published. That said, national polling consistently shows broad American support for sports betting legalization: a 2023 American Gaming Association survey found that 33% of American adults placed a sports bet in the prior 12 months, up from 18% in 2020, reflecting rapidly normalizing attitudes toward the activity [2].
Morgan’s public positioning frames the measure as both a consumer rights issue and a fiscal opportunity, arguing that Nebraskans already bet on sports through unregulated channels and that the state should capture that revenue rather than cede it to offshore operators. That argument has proven persuasive in neighboring states and will likely anchor the campaign’s public messaging through 2025.
Supporters of the Nebraska mobile betting measure project that a legal, regulated mobile market could generate approximately $3 million per month in state tax revenue, or roughly $36 million annually [1]. That estimate is based on handle projections derived from population size, comparable state markets, and current rates of sports betting participation among Nebraska adults.
For context, Iowa, a neighboring state with a similar population base of about 3.2 million people, generated over $200 million in total sports betting handle during January 2024 alone, according to the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission. Nebraska’s population of approximately 2 million would logically produce a smaller but still meaningful market. The $36 million annual tax projection assumes a tax rate and handle volume consistent with mid-tier Midwestern states.
State tax revenue from sports betting has become a significant line item in many state budgets since the Supreme Court’s 2018 Murphy v. NCAA ruling opened the door to nationwide legalization. New Jersey collected over $170 million in sports betting taxes in fiscal year 2023, while smaller markets like Arkansas and Wyoming each collected between $5 million and $15 million annually, giving Nebraska’s $36 million projection a plausible range [2].
Beyond direct tax receipts, legal mobile betting would generate licensing fees, compliance employment, and technology vendor contracts within Nebraska. Existing casino operators like Warhorse would gain mobile extensions of their current retail licenses, expanding their addressable customer base without requiring new physical infrastructure.
Problem gambling treatment funding is typically tied to sports betting tax revenue in states that have legalized the activity. Nebraska’s existing Gamblers Assistance Program, administered through the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, would likely receive a dedicated allocation from mobile betting proceeds if the ballot measure passes and the Legislature subsequently enacts enabling legislation.
| State | Mobile Betting Legal? | Year Launched | Est. Annual Tax Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iowa | Yes | 2019 | ~$30M |
| Colorado | Yes | 2020 | ~$50M |
| Kansas | Yes | 2022 | ~$10M |
| South Dakota | Retail only | 2021 | <$5M |
| Nebraska | No (retail only) | N/A | $0 (mobile) |
Nebraska sits in a shrinking minority of states that permit retail sports betting but block mobile wagering. As of early 2025, 38 states plus Washington D.C. have legalized sports betting in some form, and the overwhelming majority of legal handle flows through mobile apps rather than physical sportsbook windows [2]. Industry data from the American Gaming Association consistently shows that mobile accounts for 80% to 90% of total sports betting volume in states where both options exist.
Iowa launched mobile sports betting in August 2019 and processed over $2 billion in annual handle within three years. Colorado voters approved mobile betting via a 2019 ballot measure, and the state collected $50.7 million in sports betting tax revenue during fiscal year 2023, according to the Colorado Division of Gaming. These comparisons give Nebraska operators a credible data foundation for their $3 million monthly projection [3].
The ballot measure route is not unusual in Nebraska, which has a strong tradition of direct democracy. Voters approved the initial casino gambling expansion in 2020 through a pair of constitutional amendments, and the same mechanism is being deployed here. That precedent matters because it signals that Nebraska’s political structure is genuinely open to gambling expansion when voters, rather than legislators, make the call.
For readers who currently use crypto casinos or offshore betting platforms, Nebraska’s petition drive is directly relevant. A significant portion of Nebraska residents who bet on sports today do so through unregulated offshore sites, many of which accept Bitcoin, Ethereum, and stablecoins as primary payment methods. Legal mobile betting would create a regulated alternative, though it would not necessarily displace crypto platforms that offer broader market coverage, faster payouts, or privacy features that licensed state operators cannot match.
The broader trend matters here: every state that legalizes mobile sports betting tightens the regulatory environment around offshore and crypto-native gambling platforms operating in that jurisdiction. Nebraska joining the regulated market in 2026 would likely prompt increased scrutiny of unlicensed operators targeting Nebraska residents, consistent with patterns seen in Iowa and Colorado after their respective launches. Crypto casino users in Nebraska should monitor how enabling legislation defines “mobile sports betting” and whether it includes any provisions targeting offshore platform access [3].
If petition organizers submit 300,000 valid signatures by July 2025 and voters approve the measure in November 2026, the Nebraska Legislature could enact enabling legislation allowing mobile betting to launch as early as late February or March 2026, potentially in time for March Madness. The exact launch date would depend on how quickly the Legislature acts and how fast operators obtain mobile licenses.
How many signatures does Nebraska need for the 2026 sports betting ballot?Nebraska law requires initiative petitions to carry signatures from at least 5% of voters who participated in the most recent general election. Campaign organizers have set a target of approximately 300,000 signatures to clear that threshold with a buffer for invalid or duplicate entries [1].
Who is leading the Nebraska mobile sports betting petition?Lance Morgan, CEO of Warhorse Casino in Lincoln, Nebraska, is the most prominent public advocate for the petition campaign. Warhorse Casino and other licensed Nebraska casino operators are backing the effort financially and organizationally, framing it as an extension of the retail sports betting rights voters approved in 2020.
How much tax revenue would Nebraska get from mobile sports betting?Supporters project approximately $3 million per month in state tax revenue from a legal mobile sports betting market, totaling around $36 million per year [1]. That figure is based on population comparisons with neighboring states like Iowa and Colorado, where mobile betting has generated tens of millions in annual tax receipts since launching between 2019 and 2020 [3].
Nebraska’s mobile sports betting petition drive is a well-organized, data-backed push that has a realistic path to the 2026 ballot. The 300,000-signature target is large but achievable, particularly with casino operator resources behind the effort, and the 70% approval figure Lance Morgan cites, even discounted for campaign bias, suggests the measure would pass if it reaches voters. The July 2025 deadline creates a clear, near-term milestone that will signal whether the campaign has the organizational strength to succeed.
The fiscal argument is the campaign’s strongest asset. A projected $36 million in annual tax revenue is a compelling number for a state legislature that has watched neighboring Iowa and Colorado monetize mobile betting for years while Nebraska residents bet through unregulated channels. Every month without a legal mobile market is revenue the state does not collect and consumer protection it does not provide.
If the signatures land and voters say yes in November 2026, Nebraska will join the mainstream of American sports betting states, and the March Madness 2026 window will mark a genuine turning point for gambling regulation in the Great Plains.
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The post Nebraska Mobile Betting 2026 Ballot: Petition Drive Explained first appeared on Cryptsy - Latest Cryptocurrency News and Predictions and is written by Ethan Blackburn


