Our editorial standards exist for one reason: Louisiana gambling law is strict, fast-moving, and easy to get wrong. This page explains how we research, source, verify, and update everything we publish, and how we keep our coverage independent from the operators we write about.
Our standards in brief
Every legal claim is checked against the Louisiana Gaming Control Board (LGCB), the Louisiana State Police Gaming Enforcement Division, and the state statutes at legis.la.gov before it goes live. We never present offshore or unlicensed sites as legal or safe, we label unverified facts with, and we keep responsible-gambling resources on every relevant page. All coverage is written for adults 21 and older.
Accuracy comes first
We write for readers in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Shreveport, Bossier City, Lake Charles, and Lafayette who need to know what is actually permitted where they live. Getting a fact wrong about gambling law can cost a reader real money or expose them to legal risk. So accuracy is not a goal we aim for, it is the bar a page must clear before publication.
We distinguish carefully between three things that are often blurred online: licensed real-money online casinos, dual-currency sweepstakes casinos, and pure social casinos. Real-money online casinos are not legal in Louisiana, and SB 885 stalled in committee in 2026, so no state-regulated online casino exists. We will not call a sweepstakes casino a "real-money online casino," because the two are legally distinct.
When we cover bonuses on our Louisiana casino bonuses and no-deposit pages, we read the actual terms: wagering requirements, eligibility, expiry, and any Louisiana-specific exclusion. We do not repeat marketing numbers we have not confirmed.
How we source our information
We prioritize primary sources over secondary commentary. For legal questions, that means the statutes themselves (notably La. R.S. 14:90), official LGCB notices, Louisiana Attorney General opinions, and the Louisiana State Police Gaming Enforcement Division. For market questions, it means operator terms of service, geolocation behavior, and direct testing where possible.
We cite official bodies by name so readers can verify our work. When a claim rests on legal interpretation rather than an explicit ruling, we say so plainly instead of dressing analysis up as settled law.
Example: where the law is unsettled
Pure social casinos that use Gold Coins only, with no cash or prize redemption, appear to be permitted under La. R.S. 14:90. This reflects legal-commentator analysis, not an explicit state ruling, so we mark it and never state flatly that social casinos are "legal" in Louisiana. See our Louisiana social casinos guide for the full picture.
Legal verification before publish
No page making a legal claim goes live until that claim is checked against an official source. Louisiana's framework is specific, and we track it closely.
On the sweepstakes question, we follow the record closely. On July 2, 2025, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill issued an opinion deeming dual-currency sweepstakes casinos (Gold Coins plus redeemable Sweeps Coins) illegal gambling under La. R.S. 14:90. The LGCB sent 40-plus cease-and-desist letters in June 2025, and the major dual-currency sweepstakes operators have since exited the state.
| Operator category | Louisiana availability |
|---|---|
| Major dual-currency sweepstakes operators | Not available |
| Other dual-currency sweepstakes operators | Not available |
| Sweepstakes operators that kept a model but dropped LA redemption | Dropped LA Sweeps Coins redemption |
| Remaining dual-currency sweepstakes operators | Unverified |
We may explain that users can redeem eligible Sweeps Coins for cash prizes only where permitted, which differs from licensed real-money gambling. In Louisiana, the AG has deemed that dual-currency model illegal, so we do not point readers to those products as a legal option here. For the legality breakdown, see are online casinos legal in Louisiana.
Sports betting is the clear exception: online and retail sports betting is legal, live online since January 2022, in 55 of Louisiana's 64 parishes. Nine parishes opted out, and operators enforce this with geolocation. Retail casino gaming is robust, anchored by Caesars New Orleans (the only land-based casino, rebranded from Harrah's in May 2024), roughly 15 riverboat casinos, four racinos, and four tribal casinos run by the Chitimacha, Coushatta, Tunica-Biloxi, and Jena Band of Choctaw under IGRA compacts. See casinos near Louisiana for venue details.
Independence from operators
Some of our pages contain affiliate links, and we may earn a commission when a reader signs up through them. That relationship never changes a legal fact, a rating, or a recommendation. We rank and describe products on the merits, and a partnership does not buy a better verdict.
We will not place a misleading "Play Now" call to action on an operator that is not available to Louisiana players. If a brand has exited the state or cannot legally serve it, we say so rather than route readers to it. Offshore and unlicensed casinos are framed as risky, unregulated, and not recommended, never as legal or safe alternatives.
How and when we update
Louisiana law and brand availability change quickly, as the 2025 sweepstakes enforcement wave showed. We review pages when the LGCB issues guidance, when legislation such as SB 885 moves, when an AG opinion lands, or when an operator changes its Louisiana status. Each page carries a visible last-updated date.
If you spot something out of date or believe a fact is wrong, tell us and we will recheck it against the official source. Accuracy is a process, not a one-time event.
Responsible gambling, on every page
You must be 21 or older to gamble in Louisiana. If gambling stops being fun, help is free and confidential: call the Louisiana helpline at 1-877-770-STOP (1-877-770-7867) or the national line at 1-800-GAMBLER. Louisiana offers a self-exclusion program with a five-year minimum term and in-person enrollment. You can also reach the National Council on Problem Gambling (NCPG) and the Louisiana Association on Compulsive Gambling. Our responsible gambling guide has the full list.
Editorial note: This page is reviewed for accuracy, legal clarity, bonus transparency, and responsible gambling information. Louisiana gambling laws and operator availability can change, so all legal and promotional details should be verified before publication.
