Tribal Casinos in Arizona — The Complete Guide
Arizona is the sixth-largest tribal gaming market in the United States. 22 of the state's 24 federally recognized tribes operate gaming under the 2002 model compact, generating an estimated $3 billion in annual Gross Gaming Revenue. The 2021 amendment opened the door to sports betting and made Arizona one of the most active U.S. mobile sports markets. This is the complete guide.
The Arizona model, in one paragraph
Arizona tribal gaming operates under a voter-approved framework that has evolved twice. The original 2002 model compact — authorized by Proposition 202 — created a uniform Class III gaming structure for all participating tribes. The 2021 amendments (HB 2772) added sports betting under a hybrid framework: up to 10 mobile event-wagering licenses go to tribes, with a parallel set of licenses for the state's professional sports franchises and venues. This dual-license structure makes Arizona unusual in U.S. tribal gaming because it permits commercial sports-betting operators (FanDuel, BetMGM, Caesars, etc.) to acquire mobile licenses outside the tribal compact — though most ultimately partner with tribes for property placement. Combined retail + mobile sports-betting handle approached $7 billion in 2025.
Key facts at a glance
- Compact framework: 2002 model compact (Proposition 202), amended 2021 for sports betting (HB 2772)
- Permitted Class III: slots (capped per-tribe), banked card games, sports betting (retail + mobile under 2021)
- State revenue share: 1–8% on slots (tiered); 8% retail / 10% mobile on sports betting
- Sports betting licenses: 10 tribal + 10 commercial (pro-sports-affiliated)
- Primary trade group: Arizona Indian Gaming Association (AZIGA)
- State regulator: Arizona Department of Gaming (ADG)
The largest Arizona tribal gaming operators
| Tribe | Flagship property | Location | Sports book partner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gila River Indian Community | Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino · Vee Quiva · Lone Butte | Phoenix metro (south) | BetMGM |
| Tohono O'odham Nation | Desert Diamond Casinos: West Valley · Tucson · Sahuarita · Why | Greater Phoenix + Tucson | Desert Diamond Sports (proprietary) |
| Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community | Talking Stick Resort · Casino Arizona | Scottsdale | BetMGM (partnered) |
| Ak-Chin Indian Community | Harrah's Ak-Chin Casino | Maricopa | Caesars Sportsbook |
| Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation | We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort | Fort McDowell | Bally Bet |
| Yavapai-Apache Nation | Cliff Castle Casino Hotel | Camp Verde | Caesars Sportsbook (retail) |
| Yavapai-Prescott Indian Tribe | Bucky's Casino & Yavapai Casino | Prescott | — |
| Pascua Yaqui Tribe | Casino del Sol Resort | Tucson | Hard Rock Bet |
| Tonto Apache Tribe | Mazatzal Hotel & Casino | Payson | DraftKings |
| White Mountain Apache Tribe | Hon-Dah Resort Casino | Pinetop | — |
| San Carlos Apache Tribe | Apache Gold Casino Resort | San Carlos | — |
| Navajo Nation | Twin Arrows · Fire Rock · Flowing Water · Northern Edge | AZ + NM border | — |
| Hualapai Tribe | Grand Canyon West (gaming on tribal lands) | Peach Springs | — |
| Quechan Tribe | Paradise Casino · Quechan Casino Resort | Yuma + CA border | — |
| Cocopah Tribe | Cocopah Casino Resort | Somerton | — |
Arizona sports betting — the 2021 framework
Arizona's HB 2772, signed by Governor Doug Ducey in April 2021, created the most operator-rich U.S. sports betting market by per-capita licensee count. Live mobile betting launched September 9, 2021. Operating structure:
- 10 tribal event-wagering operator licenses — held by Arizona gaming tribes, used to launch mobile sportsbooks under platform-partner agreements.
- 10 commercial licenses — tied to Arizona's professional sports franchises (Cardinals, Diamondbacks, Suns, Coyotes, Cardinals + minor-league/PGA-tour venues).
- Retail sportsbooks at all major Arizona tribal casinos plus sports venue locations
- Tax: 8% on retail handle, 10% on mobile handle, paid into the state general fund
The dual-license structure produces unusual partnership arrangements: BetMGM operates under the Gila River license, FanDuel under the Phoenix Suns license, Caesars under both the Ak-Chin tribal license and the Arizona Diamondbacks commercial license. Annual sports-betting handle has grown each year since launch, exceeding $7 billion in 2025 and trailing only New York, New Jersey, and Illinois.
The 2002 model compact framework
The Arizona model compact was the product of years of negotiation between Arizona tribes and the state. Voters approved Proposition 202 in November 2002 with 51% support, establishing the framework now in effect. The compact runs for 20 years from execution (most expired or were renegotiated in 2022–2023; the renegotiated compacts run through 2042–2043). The 2021 amendments added sports betting while preserving the underlying compact structure. For broader federal context, see our Legal Guide.
Revenue sharing and economic impact
Arizona tribal gaming exclusivity fees totaled approximately $93 million in fiscal year 2024 (most recent published figure); sports-betting tax revenue added another $40+ million. Combined annual state revenue from tribal gaming and related sports betting exceeds $130 million. Of this, approximately 56% supports Arizona public K–12 education through compact-defined trust accounts. Direct tribal-gaming employment exceeds 13,000 across Arizona properties.
Who regulates what
- Each tribe's Tribal Gaming Regulatory Authority — day-to-day regulator
- National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) — federal regulator
- Arizona Department of Gaming (ADG) — state regulator; vendor licensure, sports-betting oversight, problem-gambling programs
- Arizona Indian Gaming Association (AZIGA) — trade group
Frequently asked questions
How many tribal casinos are there in Arizona?
Arizona has 24 tribal gaming facilities operated by 22 of the state's 24 federally recognized tribes. Combined annual Gross Gaming Revenue is approximately $3 billion, making Arizona the sixth-largest tribal gaming market in the United States.
Can I bet on sports in Arizona?
Yes. Arizona authorized sports betting in April 2021 (HB 2772). The state operates a hybrid framework with 10 tribal mobile licenses and 10 commercial licenses tied to professional sports franchises. Major brands include BetMGM (Gila River), DraftKings (Tonto Apache), FanDuel (Phoenix Suns/Talking Stick), Caesars (multiple), Hard Rock Bet (Pascua Yaqui), and others.
What is the largest tribal casino in Arizona?
Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino (Gila River Indian Community) and Talking Stick Resort (Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community) compete for the title. Desert Diamond Casino West Valley (Tohono O'odham Nation, opened 2015 after extensive land-into-trust litigation) is also among the largest. Each generates substantial annual GGR.
What is the 2002 Arizona model compact?
Approved by voters via Proposition 202 in November 2002, the model compact established a uniform Class III gaming framework for participating Arizona tribes. It authorizes slot machines (capped per tribe), banked card games, and (under 2021 amendments) sports betting. Most original compacts have been renegotiated and now run through 2042–2043.
How much do Arizona tribes pay the state?
Exclusivity fees are tiered: 1% on the first $25 million of net win, 3% on the next $50 million, 6% on the next $25 million, and 8% above $100 million. Sports betting is taxed at 8% retail / 10% mobile. Total annual state revenue from tribal gaming exceeds $130 million.
How does Arizona compare to other tribal gaming states?
Arizona ranks sixth by GGR but is uniquely structured in the sports-betting era — the dual tribal/commercial license framework is unmatched elsewhere. Compare with our California, Oklahoma, Florida, Connecticut, and Michigan hubs.
Sources & further reading
- Arizona Indian Gaming Association (AZIGA)
- Arizona Department of Gaming
- National Indian Gaming Commission
- Arizona Proposition 202 (2002); Arizona HB 2772 (2021)
- TribalGaming.com Legal Guide
Found an error?
Write to directory@tribalgaming.com.