Virginia House Advances SB 118, Delays iGaming Launch to 2028

Virginia House committee advances SB 118, adding reenactment rule and delaying iGaming to 2028.
Virginia’s online casino bill is still alive, but lawmakers just added a major speed bump.
The Virginia House General Laws Committee voted 15–4 to advance Senate Bill 118 with a substitute and send it to Appropriations, after aligning the Senate bill with the House’s framework in HB 161. The key change is procedural but meaningful.
The bill now includes a two-session reenactment requirement, effectively pushing any potential iGaming launch to 2028 rather than the earlier implementation schedule contemplated by the Senate version.
What changed: Senate’s 2027 launch timeline gets replaced
The Senate-passed version of SB 118 included an implementation structure that would have allowed online casinos to launch in July 2027, after regulatory rulemaking by the Virginia Lottery.
Virginia's online casino bill (SB 118) was initially rejected but passed after a Senate revote led by Schuyler VanValkenberg.
— Stone Age Tax (@stoneagetax) February 18, 2026
Now it's heading to the House of Delegates which also passed HB 161 on Tuesday following a previously unsuccessful attempt. https://t.co/3icn7LwTh4 pic.twitter.com/PaKNetBr8j
The House substitute removes that automatic effective date. Under the House-aligned approach, SB 118 would not take effect unless the 2027 General Assembly reenacts it, meaning the earliest realistic live date shifts into 2028.
If reenacted, the substitute directs the Virginia Lottery Board to begin receiving notices of intent on July 1, 2027, and to finalize regulations by January 1, 2028.
The “notice of intent” window sets up a synchronized launch
One of the more operator-relevant mechanics is the notice-of-intent structure, which is designed to prevent a single brand from jumping the line.
Operators submitting within 60 days of enactment must be given an equal opportunity to launch on the same day. Miss that 60-day window and the penalty is significant: the applicant must wait at least six months after the Commonwealth’s initial iGaming launch before going live.
Key timeline mechanics (House substitute):
- Notice of intent opens July 1, 2027
- Regs due by January 1, 2028
- 60-day notice window creates equal launch opportunity
- Late applicants must wait six months post-launch
Fees, taxes, labor, and where the money goes
By conforming SB 118 to HB 161, the House substitute locks in several structural provisions operators and investors will care about.
The framework requires a separate notice of intent for each internet gaming platform, with a per-platform fee (HB 161 describes a $2 million platform fee deposited into a holding fund for startup costs tied to a future gaming commission).
On tax policy and allocation, the House-aligned version shifts the distribution away from the Senate’s education-focused structure and instead allocates:
- 5% to the Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund
- 6% to a new Internet Lottery Hold Harmless Fund until January 1, 2037
- 89% to the general fund until 2037, then 95% to the general fund starting in 2037
The substitute also adds a labor component by requiring evidence of labor peace agreements for applicants and certain contractors.
What the House substitute bakes in:
- Per-platform notice of intent and fee structure
- Labor peace agreement requirement
- Revenue allocation rewrite with new hold harmless fund
- Creates an Internet Gaming Platform Fee Holding Fund to support future combined gaming oversight
- Responsible gaming hotline language updated to 1-800-MY-RESET
Why this matters: Virginia is not saying “no,” it is saying “not yet”
The 15–4 committee vote is a real step forward, but the reenactment requirement is the headline. It gives Virginia lawmakers another full session to negotiate the politics, the fiscal assumptions, and the regulatory structure, while keeping iGaming alive as a budget and policy option.
The bill now heads to Appropriations, where the money details, enforcement costs, and any projected social impacts will be scrutinized.
For operators, the takeaway is simple: Virginia iGaming momentum continues, but the market is being built on a longer runway, with more conditions, more structure, and more legislative checkpoints than the original Senate timeline suggested.
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