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1 in 5 US Adults Are Sports Bettors: New Study

Nearly one in five US adults has wagered money on sports in the past year. That’s according to a report released Wednesday.

Pew Research, which surveyed 6,034 adults from July 5-17, reported that 19% of US adults claimed to make a sports wager in the past year. The most popular way, reported by 15% of respondents, was wagering with friends or family in a casual bet, private betting pool or fantasy league.

The Circa Sportsbook in Downtown Las Vegas. According to a new Pew Research survey, 8% of US adults bet on sports at a casino, racetrack or kiosk. (Image: LA Times)

After that, 8% of respondents reported betting on sports in person at a casino, racetrack or kiosk, and 6% reported doing so online. (Some respondents bet in multiple ways.) More than 80% of all legal sports bets in the US are made online.

Much More Room to Grow

The survey’s results indicate that the emergent US legal sports betting industry, while growing rapidly, still has much more room to expand.

Since the Supreme Court cleared the way for all 50 US states to legalize sports betting four years ago, Americans have wagered over $125 billion on sports. As of last Thursday’s NFL season kickoff, sports betting was legal in 31 states plus Washington DC. Several other states will probably legalize it soon.

A record 46.6 million Americans plan to bet on the current NFL season, according to the American Gaming Association. That’s up 3% from last year.

Other Sports Betting Survey Results

More male respondents (24%) than female (15%) reported sports betting.
22% of respondents under age 50 reported sports betting, compared 17% over 50.
27% of Black respondents and 24% of the Hispanic respondents reported sports betting, compared to 18% of white adults and 10% of Asian-Americans.
Education was not a factor, with 18% of college grads reporting sports betting, compared to 20% of those without a college degree.
Wealth was not a factor, either, with 22% of high-income households, 19% of middle-income households and 19% of lower-income households reporting sports bets.
Sports betting did not significantly vary by party affiliation, with 21% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, and 19% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents reporting placing a sports bet in the past year.
57% of respondents said they thought sports betting was neither good nor bad for society, 34% thought that it was bad, and 8% thought that it was good.
49% of respondents said they thought sports betting was neither good nor bad for sports itself, 33% saw it as bad and 16% saw it as good.

 

The post 1 in 5 US Adults Are Sports Bettors: New Study appeared first on Casino.org.

 

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