Tribal Casinos in Washington — The Complete Guide
Washington is the seventh-largest tribal gaming market in the United States and operates one of the most strongly tribal-exclusivity-protective frameworks in the country. 22 federally recognized tribes operate roughly 30 properties under the 1991 model compact, and Washington is one of only two states where sports betting is exclusively retail and exclusively tribal. This is the complete guide.
The Washington model, in one paragraph
Washington's tribal gaming framework is defined by three features: strong tribal exclusivity (no commercial casinos compete for the state's gaming market — the closest competitive concept is cardrooms, which are tightly limited), no direct compact-defined revenue share (Washington tribes don't pay percentage-of-revenue fees to the state, in contrast to almost every other compacted state), and retail-only sports betting under tribal-exclusive authorization (Washington's 2020 sports-betting law gave tribes exclusive rights to operate sports books, all retail and on-premises only). The framework makes Washington one of the most operator-favorable tribal gaming jurisdictions in the United States.
Key facts at a glance
- Compact framework: 1991 model compact (amended numerous times; 2020 sports-betting amendment most significant)
- Permitted Class III: slots, banked card games, sports betting (retail only)
- State revenue share: no direct percentage-of-revenue fees; local-government impact agreements
- Sports betting: tribal-exclusive, retail-only at participating casinos
- Primary trade group: Washington Indian Gaming Association (WIGA)
- State regulator: Washington State Gambling Commission
The largest Washington tribal gaming operators
| Tribe | Flagship property | Location | Sports betting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cowlitz Indian Tribe | ilani Casino Resort | Ridgefield (north of Portland, OR) | DraftKings (retail) |
| Tulalip Tribes | Tulalip Resort Casino · Quil Ceda Creek Casino | Tulalip | Tulalip Sportsbook (retail) |
| Muckleshoot Indian Tribe | Muckleshoot Casino · Emerald Downs (horse track) | Auburn | BetMGM (retail) |
| Puyallup Tribe of Indians | Emerald Queen Casino Tacoma · EQC Fife | Tacoma + Fife | Emerald Queen Sports (retail) |
| Snoqualmie Tribe | Snoqualmie Casino | Snoqualmie (east of Seattle) | FanDuel (retail) |
| Suquamish Tribe | Suquamish Clearwater Casino Resort | Suquamish (across Puget Sound from Seattle) | Caesars Sportsbook (retail) |
| Squaxin Island Tribe | Little Creek Casino Resort | Shelton | Yes (retail) |
| Kalispel Tribe of Indians | Northern Quest Resort & Casino | Airway Heights (Spokane) | Yes (retail) |
| Spokane Tribe of Indians | Spokane Tribe Casino | Airway Heights | Yes (retail) |
| Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation | 12 Tribes Resort Casino · Mill Bay · Coulee Dam · Omak | North-central WA | Yes (retail) |
| Lummi Nation | Silver Reef Casino Resort | Ferndale (near Bellingham) | Yes (retail) |
| Confederated Tribes of the Yakama Nation | Legends Casino Hotel | Toppenish | Yes (retail) |
| Quinault Indian Nation | Quinault Beach Resort Casino | Ocean Shores | Yes (retail) |
| Swinomish Indian Tribal Community | Swinomish Casino & Lodge | Anacortes | Yes (retail) |
| Nooksack Indian Tribe | Nooksack River Casino | Deming | Yes (retail) |
| Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe | 7 Cedars Casino | Sequim | Yes (retail) |
Washington sports betting — tribal-exclusive, retail-only
Washington's 2020 sports-betting authorization (HB 2638, signed by Governor Jay Inslee in March 2020) is structurally narrower than most U.S. sports-betting markets but commercially valuable to tribes. Key provisions:
- Tribal exclusivity. Only federally recognized Washington tribes that have signed compact amendments may operate sports books. No commercial operators (cardrooms, lotteries, racetracks) participate.
- Retail only. Mobile sports betting is restricted to on-premises Wi-Fi at participating tribal casinos. Statewide mobile betting — like Connecticut or Michigan offers — is not authorized.
- Platform partners. Tribes partner with national platforms (FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, Caesars) for technology, but the brand and revenue are controlled by the tribe.
The retail-only restriction has cost the state a substantial mobile-betting market — combined Washington tribal sports handle in 2025 was approximately $200 million, dwarfed by full-mobile states. But the tribal-exclusive structure has preserved tribal market position and earned strong political support from the state's gaming tribes.
The 1991 compact framework
Washington's tribal-state compacts trace to the early 1990s, with the first compacts signed in 1991. The framework permits Class III slot machines (subject to per-tribe caps) and a broad range of banked card games. Notably, Washington compacts have been amended frequently and incrementally — most other states renegotiate compacts every 15–25 years; Washington's amendments arrive every 3–5 years on average. For federal context, see our Legal Guide.
Revenue sharing and economic impact
Washington is one of the few U.S. states where tribes do not pay percentage-of-revenue exclusivity fees to the state. Instead, the framework operates on the principle that the tribes retain sovereign control over net gaming revenue, with separate impact-mitigation payments to host counties and cities. Total Washington tribal gaming GGR is approximately $3 billion annually, supporting 27,000+ direct jobs. Tribal-government revenue uses include healthcare (the Muckleshoot Tribe operates a comprehensive health system), housing (Tulalip housing programs), and education funding across all member tribes.
Who regulates what
- Each tribe's Tribal Gaming Regulatory Authority
- National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC)
- Washington State Gambling Commission — state regulator; vendor licensure, compact administration
- Washington Indian Gaming Association (WIGA) — trade group
Frequently asked questions
How many tribal casinos are there in Washington?
Approximately 30 tribal gaming facilities operated by 22 of Washington's 29 federally recognized tribes. Combined annual GGR is approximately $3 billion, making Washington the seventh-largest tribal gaming market in the United States.
Is sports betting legal in Washington?
Yes, but with significant limits: retail-only at tribal casinos, no statewide mobile, tribal-exclusive (no commercial operators). The 2020 HB 2638 framework granted exclusive sports-betting rights to gaming tribes through compact amendment.
What is the largest tribal casino in Washington?
ilani Casino Resort (Cowlitz Indian Tribe, Ridgefield near the Oregon border) and Tulalip Resort Casino (Tulalip Tribes, north of Seattle) are typically the two largest by floor and revenue. Muckleshoot Casino in Auburn and Emerald Queen Casino Tacoma (Puyallup Tribe, opened 2020) are also major operators.
Do Washington tribes pay the state?
Not in the form of percentage-of-revenue exclusivity fees, which makes Washington structurally different from most compacted states. Local-government impact-mitigation agreements provide funding to host counties and cities. The 2020 sports-betting framework includes regulatory and problem-gambling contributions.
How does Washington compare to other tribal gaming states?
Washington is the most operator-favorable major tribal gaming jurisdiction in the country — strong tribal exclusivity, no direct state revenue share, frequent incremental compact amendments. The retail-only sports betting framework is unusual but politically durable. Compare with our hubs for California, Oklahoma, Florida, Connecticut, Michigan, and Arizona.
Sources & further reading
- Washington Indian Gaming Association (WIGA)
- Washington State Gambling Commission
- Washington HB 2638 (2020) — sports-betting authorization
- TribalGaming.com Legal Guide
Found an error?
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