Updated March 2026
New Hampshire Legal

Are Sweepstakes Casinos Legal in New Hampshire? (2026 Guide)

MB
Marcus Bennett
Compliance & News Editor, US
Updated: May 2026
6 min read

Sweepstakes casinos are legal and broadly accessible to adult residents of New Hampshire. Sweepstakes casinos broadly accessible in New Hampshire. State has regulated sports betting but no online casino. This guide explains the legal basis, age requirements, recommended operators, and tax implications for New Hampshire residents.

Sweepstakes casinos in New Hampshire operate under the standard federal sweepstakes promotional framework (18 U.S.C. § 1302) plus New Hampshire's state-level sweepstakes statutes administered by the Office of the Attorney General. Status: Generally accessible.

New Hampshire does not impose state-level restrictions specific to the sweepstakes casino model beyond what the federal framework requires. The dual-currency model (Gold Coins for play-for-fun, Sweeps Coins for redeemable prize entries) plus the mandatory Alternative Means of Entry (AMOE) makes the model legally distinct from gambling under New Hampshire law.

For specific legal questions about gambling or sweepstakes in New Hampshire, consult the Office of the Attorney General (https://www.doj.nh.gov/) or a licensed attorney. SpinVerdict does not provide legal advice.

Minimum age requirements

The minimum age for sweepstakes casinos in New Hampshire is 18+ in most cases.

Operators apply their own age policies on top of the state minimum. Stake.us applies 21+ in certain states regardless of state minimum; other operators apply 21+ uniformly as a conservative compliance policy. Verify the specific operator's age requirement for New Hampshire on their terms-of-service before signing up.

The following operators currently accept New Hampshire residents (verified at the time of writing, operators adjust state lists frequently, so confirm on the operator's signup flow before committing):

• Stake.us, see our full review at /online-casinos/stake-us/

• Chumba Casino, see our full review at /online-casinos/chumba-casino/

• Pulsz, see our full review at /online-casinos/pulsz/

• High 5 Casino, see our full review at /online-casinos/high-5-casino/

If signup is blocked from your address, the operator has decided not to operate in New Hampshire. Don't rely on outdated affiliate-site lists; the operator's signup flow is the authoritative source.

Taxes on sweepstakes winnings in New Hampshire

Sweepstakes prize winnings are taxable as "other income" under US federal law (IRS Publication 525). Operators typically issue Form 1099-MISC if your cumulative redemptions from that operator hit $600 or more in a calendar year. You're responsible for reporting prize income on your federal return regardless of whether a 1099 is issued.

New Hampshire has no state income tax, so sweepstakes redemptions are subject only to federal income tax.

Responsible play resources in New Hampshire

The federal 1-800-GAMBLER 24/7 helpline (operated by the National Council on Problem Gambling) is available to anyone in the US, including New Hampshire residents. State-specific helpline for New Hampshire: 603-724-1605 (NH Council).

Self-exclusion in the sweepstakes model is per-operator, there is no nationwide equivalent of the UK's GamStop. NCPG maintains a state-by-state directory of state-level self-exclusion programs and resources at ncpgambling.org/programs-resources/state-resources.

If you or someone you know is struggling with gambling, call 1-800-GAMBLER. Support is free, confidential, and available 24/7.

New Hampshire sweepstakes FAQ

Q: Are sweepstakes casinos legal in New Hampshire? A: Yes, they operate under federal sweepstakes promotional law and are generally accessible to New Hampshire adults.

Q: What's the minimum age in New Hampshire? A: 18+ in most cases. Some operators apply higher age thresholds regardless of state minimum.

Q: Can I redeem Sweeps Coins for cash in New Hampshire? A: Yes, redemption rails vary by operator (ACH, Skrill, crypto at Stake.us, mailed check at VGW brands). Minimum redemption threshold typically 50 SC = $50.

Q: Do I owe taxes on sweepstakes winnings in New Hampshire? A: Federal income tax applies in all cases. New Hampshire has no state income tax, so federal tax is the only obligation.

MB

Marcus Bennett

Compliance & News Editor, US

Marcus covers US sweepstakes law and runs SpinVerdict's US news desk. He tracks state-by-state availability, sweepstakes promotional law, and regulator actions, and owns the editorial line on responsible play, including 1-800-GAMBLER and the NCPG. Every news item is sourced to a primary document.

8 Years in iGaming