New Hampshire Collects $14.7M in Sports Betting Taxes Through April 2025

Published: Jul 12, 2025, 7:18 PM
3 min read
Updated: Jul 12, 2025, 7:18 PM

April Revenue Insights

CONCORD, NH, July 11, 2025 — New Hampshire’s exclusive sports betting partnership with DraftKings continues to deliver for state coffers. From January through April 2025, sports bettors wagered $288.4 million, generating $33.6 million in gross gaming revenue (GGR) and $14.72 million in tax revenue.

That marks a year-over-year increase of 14.2% in tax revenue compared to the same period in 2024, despite a slightly lower overall handle. The state’s average hold rate through April was 11.64%, an improvement over both 2024 (10.14%) and 2023 (9.51%) during the same four-month window.

Revenue Summary: Jan–Apr 2025

MonthHandleGGRHold %Tax Revenue
January$78.95M$11.14M14.11%$4.94M
February$63.26M$8.00M12.65%$3.49M
March$77.47M$6.79M8.77%$2.96M
April$68.76M$7.65M11.13%$3.33M
Total$288.44M$33.58M$14.72M

New Hampshire collects 50% of all GGR as tax revenue, one of the highest effective rates in the country. The funds are earmarked for public education, providing a consistent financial stream for the state’s K–12 system.

Year-Over-Year Comparison (Jan–Apr)

YearHandleGGRTax Revenue
2023$352.6M$31.18M$14.08M
2024$267.0M$27.32M$12.05M
2025$288.4M$33.58M$14.72M

While 2023 still holds the highest handle over this period, 2025 leads in both gross revenue and tax generation, suggesting stronger margins and bettor engagement despite slightly fewer total bets.

Compare All U.S. States Sports Betting Revenue

DraftKings Drives the Entire Market

DraftKings remains the sole sportsbook operator in New Hampshire under an exclusive agreement with the New Hampshire Lottery. This streamlined model has been in place since the market launched in late 2019 and has avoided the regulatory overhead and marketing wars seen in other states.

The single-operator model appears to be working: with a population of just 1.4 million, New Hampshire collected more in sports betting taxes through April 2025 than some larger states with wider access.

Revenue Path Ahead

New Hampshire’s sports betting market continues to deliver reliable, high-margin returns for the state, especially for its public education system. With hold rates climbing and GGR on pace to surpass 2023, the state shows that simplicity and structure can outperform scale in the right environment.

As more states reevaluate their licensing models and tax policies, New Hampshire’s DraftKings-only setup may become a case study in how exclusivity can still drive competitive returns, without market chaos.

<p><strong>Sol Fayerman-Hansen</strong> is Editor-in-Chief at RG.org with 20+ years of experience in sports journalism, gambling regulation, and tech. His work has appeared in <i>Forbes</i>, <i>ESPN</i>, and <i>NFL.com</i>, covering U.S. and Canadian gambling laws, major sports events, and wagering trends. Since 2023, Sol has led RG.org’s global editorial efforts, focusing on transparency, data accuracy, and regulatory insight. He works closely with researchers and legal experts to uphold E-E-A-T and Trust Project standards.</p><p>📍 Israel/Canada 🌐 English, Hebrew 🎯 Gambling law, responsible gaming, tech in betting</p>
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