New Hampshire Sports Betting Age Will Not Change

By Robert Linnehan in Sports Betting News
Published:

- A bill to raise the legal age to sports bet in New Hampshire was not moved out of committee
- The committee voted 11 to 7 that the bill is “inexpedient to legislate.”
- The bill is now dead
The legal age to bet on sports in New Hampshire will face no changes after all.
A bill, HB 83, sponsored by several New Hampshire legislators, seeking to raise the New Hampshire minimum sports betting age from 18 to 21 has officially died in committee after an 11-7 vote declaring it “inexpedient to legislate.”
The sports betting age will officially remain at 18 moving forward.
Reduced Revenues, Reduced Liberties
The bill was sponsored by several members of both the New Hampshire House of Representatives and Senate, including Rep. Sallie Fellows (D-8), Rep. Michael Cahill (D-10), Sen. Ruth Ward (R-8), and Sen. Suzanne Prentiss (D-5).
The Granite State is one of just four markets in the country to allow those as young as 18 to bet on sports.
Rep. Fred Doucette (R-25) decried the bill, noting that it would likely reduce sports betting tax revenues in the state.
“We’re having a revenue issue as it stands. I can see revenues going down with this piece of legislation as written, as present,” he said.
Doucette’s opinion was backed by a fiscal estimate attached to the bill. According to the report, the state took in more than $33.6 million in sports betting revenues in FY 2024. The estimate showed that sports bettors under the age of 21 in the state accounted for approximately 1.9% of gross gaming revenue, which would be $639,443 in total each year.
Raising the legal age to 21 would decrease the state’s sports betting revenues by $320,000 in FY 2026, by $640,000 in FY 2027, and $640,000 every fiscal year thereafter.
“Sports betting revenue can shift based on a variety of factors, however, the Lottery Commission expects this number to remain consistent for FY 2026 and beyond. Considering this bill is effective halfway through FY 2026, it is expected to decrease state lottery revenue, and transfer to the education trust fund, by approximately $320,000 in FY 2026 and by $640,000 in FY 2027 and each year thereafter,” bill sponsors wrote.
It’s about personal liberties for state residents, Rep. Cyril Aures (R-169) said during the hearing.
“It’s a liberty issue for young people. If they want to bet with their money, let them bet.”
Take a Stand For New Age Limit
Rep. Thomas Schamberg (D-6) stood up for the bill, noting that a sports betting age limit should be the same for other vices in the state.
“I think it’s important we make a statement for an age limit like we’ve done with alcohol, smoking, tobacco products, and vapes,” he said.
If it truly is a matter of liberty, Rep. Susan Elberger (D-5) said other age limits on vices should be evaluated.
“I’ll go back to comments from Representative Schamberg. Why not let 18-year-olds drink alcohol, or smoke cigarettes? It doesn’t make sense to me to say liberty counts only in one space but not in another,” she said.

Regulatory Writer and Editor
Rob covers all regulatory developments in online gambling. He specializes in US sports betting news along with casino regulation news as one of the most trusted sources in the country.