Massachusetts Becomes First State to Require Sportsbook Limit Notices

Massachusetts has passed a first-in-the-nation rule requiring sportsbooks to notify players within 48 hours when betting limits are imposed, effective June 1.
Massachusetts has taken a significant step in sports betting consumer protection, becoming the first state in the country to formally require sportsbooks to notify players when their accounts are restricted. The rule takes effect June 1 and is already drawing attention from operators, bettors, and regulators across the country.
Massachusetts has already taken steps to address sports gambling taxes and in-play opportunities in the Bay State; now, they turn their sights on limit notices.
A Unanimous Vote on a First-of-Its-Kind Rule
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission voted 5-0 on February 26 to adopt regulation 205 CMR 238.30, which requires licensed sportsbooks to deliver a timely notice within 48 hours whenever a player’s betting activity is limited. The notice must explain that a restriction was placed, identify the reason, and specify which markets are affected.
The rule does not apply only to new limits going forward. Operators must also notify customers who are currently restricted, as well as those who were limited in the past.
Commission Chair Jordan Maynard was direct about the significance of the decision. “We are the first jurisdiction to take up this issue,” he said. “This was not an easy topic to take on, but it’s a good thing for the citizens and patrons of the Commonwealth.”
What Bettors Have Been Saying
The regulation did not emerge in a vacuum. Massachusetts bettors have been raising concerns about account restrictions for roughly 18 months, with many reporting that their limits arrived without explanation. A recurring complaint: limits tend to appear after a bettor wins.
MGC Sports Wagering Division Chief Carrie Torrisi summarized the pattern regulators were hearing. “What we’ve been hearing from members of the public is that if you show a tendency to win, you will be limited. And if you show a tendency to lose, you will have that limit raised,” she said during a public Commission meeting.
The Scale of the Problem
To better understand the scope of the issue, the Commission reviewed operator data as part of the rulemaking process. The study found that approximately 0.64% of Massachusetts’ 2.1 million online wagering accounts had been restricted, amounting to roughly 13,400 accounts. The data did not include the reasons behind the restrictions.
Public comments submitted during the rulemaking process underscored bettor frustration. One commenter, Frank Giordano, wrote that limits as low as 60 cents per game on accounts holding hundreds of thousands of dollars were “both punitive and discriminatory.”
Sportsbooks Respond
Major operators submitted written comments during the rulemaking process, each raising questions or suggesting adjustments. FanDuel sought flexibility in how and when notices are delivered. BetMGM requested clarification on implementation timelines. Caesars raised concerns about how the reporting obligation was structured and proposed alternative approaches.
None of the operators indicated opposition to transparency in principle, though the specifics of compliance remain a point of discussion as June 1 approaches.
What Comes After June 1
Commissioners made clear that passing the rule is only the beginning. Several members signaled they will monitor complaints closely once the rule takes effect and may seek more detailed reporting from operators if bettor concerns continue.
Commissioner Paul Brodeur put it plainly: “We’ll know pretty quickly who is making that good-faith effort toward the transparency goal.”
Chair Maynard also addressed the growing presence of prediction markets, which have attracted bettors in part because they do not impose traditional sportsbook limits. His view was clear: greater transparency from licensed operators is ultimately good for the regulated market, even if operators see short-term costs. “I think that as far as the operators can possibly push their business model to be transparent on this piece is a net positive, ultimately,” he said.
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