BonusFinder reveals 100 per cent rise in ‘online casino’ internet searches

Latest research conducted by BonusFinder.com has revealed that due to the closure of major US land-based gaming venues and cancellation of live sport there has been a 100 per cent rise in internet searches for ‘online casino’ across North America.

Carried out using Google Trends from February to the end of March this year, the research uncovered a sharp spike in players searching for ‘online casino’ following land-based venues switching off slot machines and sports events being rescheduled.

The tipping point, according to the research, came on the 12 March when more US players searched for ‘online casino’ more than ‘sports betting’ with numbers doubling in the following two weeks.

Fintan Costello, managing director, Bonusfinder.com, said: “The five states that have opened igaming are seeing month-on-month revenue rises with New Jersey leading the way.

“It has a robust and responsible framework in place to protect players and has shown that online and offline casinos can operate together within the same territory and consistently generate very healthy returns.”

“This is a wake-up call for the 12 states that have already established an online sports betting regime. They should take note of the enormous interest in online casino from players and use this momentum to legislate igaming before we start seeing players turning to unlicensed, offshore sites and the black market.

“The demand will only continue to increase as this unprecedented situation continues, therefore now is the time to focus on providing best-in-class, regulated real-money online casino games that players can enjoy responsibly and that can also help state governments make up revenue shortfalls.”

Since the repeal of PASPA in August 2018, 17 US states have regulated sports betting with only five including Delaware, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey and Pennsylvania opening up igaming.

Combined sports betting and online casino ‘handle’ across those US States was more than $1.7bn in February 2020.