Slot Machines Legal In Florida
State and Federal Laws
FLORIDA SLOT MACHINE PAYBACK STATISTICS Florida has three forms of casino gambling: casino boats, Indian casinos and gaming machines at pari-mutuels in two south Florida counties. The casino boats offer gamblers the opportunity to board ships that cruise offshore where casino gambling is legal. In addition, no slot machine license or renewal thereof shall be issued to such an applicant unless the applicant has on file with the division a binding written agreement between the applicant and the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association, Inc., governing the payment of breeders’, stallion, and special racing awards on live thoroughbred races conducted at the licensee’s pari-mutuel facility.
Gambler’s Paradise complies with all state and local laws pertaining to sales and distribution of casino equipment. The following chart shows to the best of our knowledge the current and correct information on the legal requirements for slot machines in the various states. Laws may change or vary from time to time and we assume no legal responsibility based on this listing. It is your responsibility as the purchaser to check state and local requirements for gaming equipment prior to purchase of any slot machine from Gambler’s Paradise.
State | LEGAL STATUS RESTRICTIONS/USE OF CURRENCY | LEGAL REFERENCE |
Alaska | ALL LEGAL | Alaska Statutes – Section 11.66.260 |
Arizona | ALL LEGAL | Arizona Revised Statutes 13-3301 – 13-3309 |
Arkansas | ALL LEGAL | N/A |
Kentucky | ALL LEGAL | Kentucky Revised Statutes 528.080 |
Maine | ALL LEGAL | Maine Revised Statutes Title 17A – Chapter 39 |
Minnesota | ALL LEGAL | Minnesota Statutes and Criminal Laws |
Nevada | ALL LEGAL | N/A |
Ohio | ALL LEGAL | Ohio Revised Code |
Rhode Island | ALL LEGAL | Rhode Island General Laws |
Texas | ALL LEGAL | Texas Statutes Chapter 47 |
Utah | ALL LEGAL | N/A |
Virginia | ALL LEGAL | N/A |
West Virginia | ALL LEGAL | N/A |
California | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | California Penal Code 330.7 |
Colorado | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1984 | Colorado Revised Statutes 12-47.1-103 |
Delaware | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | 28 Delaware 904 |
Florida | MACHINES 20 YEARS OR OLDER | Florida Statutes 849.235 |
Georgia | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1950 | Georgia Code Title 16, Sec. 16-12-24 |
Idaho | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1950 | Idaho Statutes Title 18, 3810 |
Illinois | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Illinois Compiled Statutes 720 5/28-1 |
Iowa | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Iowa Code 725.9 |
Kansas | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1950 | Kansas Statutes 21-4306 |
Louisiana | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Louisiana Title 15:31-1 |
Maryland | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Maryland Code Article 27-264B |
Massachusetts | MACHINES 30 YEARS OR OLDER | Massachusetts General Laws Ch. 271, Sec. 5A |
Michigan | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Michigan Compiled Statutes 750.303 |
Mississippi | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Mississippi Code 27-27-12 |
Missouri | MACHINES 30 YEARS OR OLDER | Missouri Revised Statutes 572.070 & 572.125 |
Montana | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Montana State Code 23-5-153 |
New Hamsphire | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | New Hampshire Revised Statutes 647:2 |
New Jersey | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1941 | New Jersey Statute 2C:37-7 |
New York | MACHINES 30 YEARS OR OLDER | New York Consolidated Laws 225.32 |
North Carolina | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | North Carolina General Statutes 14-309.1 |
North Dakota | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | North Dakota Century Code 12.1-28-02 |
Oklahoma | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Oklahoma State Statutes 21-964 |
Oregon | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Oregon Revised Statutes 167.147 |
Pennsylvania | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes 5513 |
South Dakota | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | South Dakota Codified Laws 22-25-14.1 |
Vermont MACHINES | MANUFACTURED PRE – 1954 | Vermont Statutes Title 13, Ch. 51, Sec. 2135 |
Washington | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Revised Code of Washington 9.46.235 |
Washington, DC | MACHINES MANUFACTURED PRE – 1952 | District of Columbia 22-1704 |
Wyoming | MACHINES 25 YEARS OR OLDER | Wyoming Statute 6-7-101 |
Alabama | PROHIBITED | AL Code Section 13A, Chapter 12, Article 2 |
Connecticut | PROHIBITED | Connecticut Chapter 946, Section 53-278a |
Hawaii | PROHIBITED | Hawaii Statutes §712-1226 |
Indiana | PROHIBITED | Indiana Code 35-45-5-4 |
Nebraska | PROHIBITED | Nebraska Revised Statutes Section 28-1107 |
New Mexico | PROHIBITED | NM Gaming Control Bd. v. Ten Gaming Devices |
South Carolina | PROHIBITED | South Carolina Code §12-21-2710 |
Tennessee | PROHIBITED | STennessee Code §39-17-505 |
Wisconsin | PROHIBITED | Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 945 |
Latest Headlines
Siding with state regulators, an appeals court Thursday ruled that controversial electronic games played in bars and other establishments are illegal slot machines.
A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal upheld a circuit judge’s decision that what are known as “pre-reveal” games violate laws preventing slot machines in most of Florida. The panel’s 10-page ruling found, in part, that the games meet the definition of slot machines because they include an element of chance.
The ruling backed the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation’s Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco, which prompted the long-running dispute by ordering two businesses to remove the machines. That move drew legal challenges from Blue Sky Games, which developed the games, and Jacksonville-based Gator Coin, which leased the games to businesses.
Supporters of the games, which also are known as Version 67, have contended that the machines are legal because they include a “preview” feature that advises players of the outcome of the games.
But regulators and other critics have argued the preview feature doesn’t matter because the “random number generator” used to create the games equates to the definition of slot machines, which are games of “chance,” under state law.
Also, a key issue has been whether the slot-machine law applies to playing a single game or a series of games. While the outcome of the first “pre-reveal” game is known in advance, a player at the outset does not know the results of subsequent games.
The ruling Thursday, quoting a section of state law, said the determination of whether the games are illegal slot machines “turns on whether the user may receive something of value ‘by reason of any element of chance or any other outcome unpredictable by the user.’ The element of chance or unpredictability must be inherent in the machine itself.”
“We hold that the trial court was correct in determining that Version 67 is a slot machine because the element of chance is inherent in it given that it has a preset win/loss ratio … and that the game outcomes are determined by the machine by chance, via an RNG (random number generator), and there is nothing the user can do to affect the outcomes,” said the ruling, written by appeals-court Judge Joseph Lewis and joined by judges James Wolf and Stephanie Ray. “Furthermore, Version 67 is a slot machine for the additional and independent reason that also inherent in it is an outcome unpredictable by the user. While it is true that the user is advised of the outcome of the game at hand ahead of time through the preview feature, the user cannot predict that outcome until it is randomly generated and then displayed by the machine. Nor can the user predict the outcome of Game 2 while playing Game 1.”
The games have drawn attention in the gambling industry and in the Legislature, which this year debated a proposal to outlaw the machines. The legislative proposal did not pass.
The appeals court upheld a decision last year by Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper, who originally sided with Blue Sky Games and Gator Coin but then reversed himself. The reversal came after the Seminole Tribe of Florida, which became involved in the case, asked Cooper to reconsider his initial decision. The tribe operates casinos that include slot machines.
The ruling Thursday described Version 67 as “profitable game that depicts traditional slot machine symbols, such as reels; it takes $1 to $20 bills; and the amount of return to the player varies by the amount of money played. Version 67 has a mandatory preview feature that displays the outcome of the game selected before the insertion of any money and before the play button appears.”
“When the first game is played, the outcome of the next game is automatically generated by the RNG and is stored in memory, and that outcome is displayed when the player presses preview for the next game,” the ruling said. “There is nothing a player can do to change the outcome that is randomly generated by the machine from among millions of potential outcomes.”
by Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida
Comments
Slot Machines Legal In Florida
- Pensacola Ed on September 1st, 2018 8:47 am
I guess the State wants the Government to be the only organization that can legally rip you off.
- Real deal on September 1st, 2018 1:12 am
They Have the “element of chance ” and a preview of possible outcome !! So what about the stuffed animal grab machines .same principle behind them as well as a lotto ticket
- Rodney on August 31st, 2018 11:08 am
How is it that this type of gaming is illegal but we have a statewide lottery, bingo halls all over, and dog racing with poker rooms? What is the difference between a slot machine and any of these “games”?