Sports Betting Trends Redefining the Industry's Future
Update: 2025-12-17
Description
Global sports betting is ending the year in a phase of recalibration, with traditional sportsbooks under pressure from fast‑growing prediction markets, tighter U.S. scrutiny, and changing promotion strategies.[1][2][4][10]
In the past 48 hours, analysts have focused on how platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, along with upcoming launches like FanDuel Predicts, are reshaping where and how people wager.[2][6] Citizens Financial Group estimates that prediction markets now generate roughly 2 billion dollars a year and could surpass 10 billion dollars annually by 2030, more than a fivefold increase, driven heavily by sports contracts and entertainment bets.[2] At Robinhood, prediction products already account for about 10 percent of total revenue, signaling a clear consumer shift toward financial style, always on betting rather than occasional game day wagers.[2]
Regulators are reacting. Multiple U.S. states have moved in 2025 to clamp down on fantasy products that resemble sportsbooks and on sweepstakes style casinos, a trend expected to continue into 2026.[1][4][10] Arizona’s recent action against Underdog’s fantasy license and federal level questions about sports prediction products show a growing willingness to redraw the line between betting and investing.[1][10] Compared with earlier in 2025, when lawmakers were mostly focused on advertising volume and responsible gambling, the new emphasis is squarely on product design and legal classification.[4][10]
Established operators are responding on several fronts. Major brands like FanDuel are developing their own prediction market style offerings, such as the planned FanDuel Predicts app, to capture growth in states where traditional online sports betting is limited or unavailable.[6] At the same time, leading U.S. sportsbooks continue to lean on aggressive promos and bonus bets, particularly around the NFL season, but with more targeted and data driven campaigns than the blanket spending seen in 2023 and 2024.[5]
Overall, the industry is shifting from pure handle growth toward product diversification, regulatory navigation, and hybrid models that blur the line between sportsbook, exchange, and prediction market, setting a more complex competitive landscape than even a year ago.[1][2][4][6][10]
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
In the past 48 hours, analysts have focused on how platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, along with upcoming launches like FanDuel Predicts, are reshaping where and how people wager.[2][6] Citizens Financial Group estimates that prediction markets now generate roughly 2 billion dollars a year and could surpass 10 billion dollars annually by 2030, more than a fivefold increase, driven heavily by sports contracts and entertainment bets.[2] At Robinhood, prediction products already account for about 10 percent of total revenue, signaling a clear consumer shift toward financial style, always on betting rather than occasional game day wagers.[2]
Regulators are reacting. Multiple U.S. states have moved in 2025 to clamp down on fantasy products that resemble sportsbooks and on sweepstakes style casinos, a trend expected to continue into 2026.[1][4][10] Arizona’s recent action against Underdog’s fantasy license and federal level questions about sports prediction products show a growing willingness to redraw the line between betting and investing.[1][10] Compared with earlier in 2025, when lawmakers were mostly focused on advertising volume and responsible gambling, the new emphasis is squarely on product design and legal classification.[4][10]
Established operators are responding on several fronts. Major brands like FanDuel are developing their own prediction market style offerings, such as the planned FanDuel Predicts app, to capture growth in states where traditional online sports betting is limited or unavailable.[6] At the same time, leading U.S. sportsbooks continue to lean on aggressive promos and bonus bets, particularly around the NFL season, but with more targeted and data driven campaigns than the blanket spending seen in 2023 and 2024.[5]
Overall, the industry is shifting from pure handle growth toward product diversification, regulatory navigation, and hybrid models that blur the line between sportsbook, exchange, and prediction market, setting a more complex competitive landscape than even a year ago.[1][2][4][6][10]
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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