Revenue Plummets in Illinois Despite Record Sports Betting Handle in October

The Illinois Gaming Board reported a sharp decline in sports betting revenue for October despite record handle numbers.

Brad Senkiw - News Editorat Covers.com
Brad Senkiw • News Editor
Dec 17, 2024 • 14:20 ET • 4 min read
Caleb Williams Chicago Bears NFL
Photo By - Imagn Images. Pictured: Chicago Bears QB Caleb Williams loses the ball on a sack.

A monumental sports betting handle in October led to a 24.5% year-over-year increase and a new record for the amount wagered in the Land of Lincoln.

The Illinois Gaming Board recently reported a monthly handle of $1.45 billion, ahead of the previous high of $1.37 billion set in November 2023. Dollars wagered in October surpassed September by over 10% and $40 billion by the state all time. 

However, October's revenue didn’t match the high volume of betting. Online and retail sportsbooks in Illinois produced $81.4 million in revenue, a 27.8% decrease from Oct. 2023. 

Sports betting operators’ 5.6% hold was the state's eighth-lowest ever and down from four points year-over-year. 

Retail sportsbooks didn’t even produce a 4% win rate on the $36.7 million wagered in person. Mobile operators kept 5.7% of a nearly $1.41 billion handle.

Still, Illinois filled its coffers with $24.5 million, up more than $7 million from the previous October because of the progressive tax rate that went into effect in July.

October revenue woes

Illinois joined a long list of betting markets that got hit hard by an unprecedented run of NFL favorites winning and many covering during a multi-week stretch in mid-October.

The Land of Lincoln was one of 15 reporting states to produce a hold under 7%, and revenue fell 40.4% from an operator-friendly September. That put Illinois alongside Nevada and Michigan among the top 10 U.S. sports betting handle states with at least a -40% month-over-month revenue change.

Three operators set new monthly handle records

Operator October handle Revenue
DraftKings $507.7 million $23.1 million
FanDuel $478.2 million $33.9 million
Fanatics Sportsbook $103.7 million $8.2 million
BetRivers $76.8 million $4.9 million
BetMGM $72.8 million $2.2 million
ESPN BET $68 million $3.9 million

The top three online sportsbooks in Illinois sports betting all produced a record wagering month. DraftKings’ $507.7 million is the highest handle the mobile operator has ever generated. FanDuel’s $478.2 million and Fanatics Sportsbook’s $103.7 million are the best those sportsbooks have ever done in Illinois. 

BetRivers beat out many of its competitors to finish with the fourth-highest handle at $76.8 million. BetMGM wasn’t far behind with $72.8 million while ESPN BET knocked Caesars out of the sixth spot with a $68 million handle. 

FanDuel and Fanatics were the only two operators to reach a 7% hold while five of the nine online sportsbooks produced win rates below 5%. Circa Sports had an especially rough month, losing over $104,000 on an $11.3 million handle.

Parlay profits plummet

Operators won just 2.8% of the $431.1 million wagered on the NFL and college football, which was close to the same hold as September. The handle was down about 3% month-over-month. 

October football struggles were felt more in parlays. The hold on multi-leg bets fell from 23.8% in September to 8.6% in October, the lowest in more than four years. Operators hauled in $25 million less in revenue month-over-month from traditional parlays.  

The World Series helped generate $94.3 million in baseball wagers during October, down from the $160.3 million from September. The return of the NBA’s regular season led to a $160.5 million basketball handle while tennis generated $110 million in wagers.

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Brad Senkiw - Covers
News Editor

Brad has been covering sports betting and iGaming industry news for Covers since 2023. He writes about a wide range of topics, including sportsbook insights, proposed legislation, regulator decision-making, state revenue reports, and online sports betting launches. Brad reported heavily on North Carolina’s legal push for and creation of online sportsbooks, appearing on numerous Tar Heel State radio and TV news shows for his insights.

Before joining Covers, Brad spent over 15 years as a reporter and editor, covering college sports for newspapers and websites while also hosting a radio show for seven years.

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