Key Takeaways
Contents
- Nevada court has prolonged restrictions on Kalshi while signaling intent to issue a preliminary injunction against the platform
- Judge determined Kalshi’s contract offerings are functionally identical to sports wagering under state statutes
- Platform must deploy geographic blocking technology to prevent Nevada resident access by May 4 deadline
- Restrictions extend beyond sporting events to include political and entertainment-based contracts
- Nevada courts have now issued favorable decisions against five platforms: Kalshi, Polymarket, Robinhood, Crypto.com, and Coinbase
Judge Jason Woodbury of Nevada’s First Judicial District Court in Carson City has prolonged restrictions against prediction market operator Kalshi, signaling his intention to grant a preliminary injunction. This decision makes Nevada the sole state with an actively enforced court order banning a prediction market provider.
In his ruling, Woodbury determined that Kalshi’s event-based contracts constitute gambling under Nevada statutes. The platform has been given until May 4 to implement geographic blocking technology that prevents state residents from accessing its services.
The April 3 decision extends a 14-day temporary restraining order initially granted on March 20. That original order prohibited Kalshi from providing sports, political, and entertainment-related contracts within state boundaries.
Woodbury announced he would issue both a preliminary injunction and another temporary restraining order while finalizing specific terms. The injunction would maintain Kalshi’s exclusion from Nevada throughout ongoing legal proceedings.
Federal Regulatory Authority Claim Dismissed
Kalshi contended its contracts fall exclusively under federal oversight since they qualify as financial instruments supervised by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The judge dismissed this argument.
Woodbury aligned with the Nevada Gaming Control Board’s stance that the contracts function identically to conventional betting. He illustrated that an individual could walk to a physical location and wager on the Dodgers, use a licensed sportsbook application for the same purpose, or purchase a sporting event contract through Kalshi.
“No matter how you slice it, that conduct is indistinguishable,” Woodbury said.
The mandate for geographic blocking technology directly contradicts a central defense Kalshi has maintained across numerous legal battles. The company has consistently claimed that implementing geofencing would impose prohibitive costs.
Yet licensed sportsbook operators in Nevada routinely employ this same technology. The ruling places Kalshi under identical compliance standards.
Should Kalshi require additional time, the company must detail its implementation progress and provide a realistic completion timeline. While the court indicated flexibility for extensions, it established stringent requirements for any such requests.
Restrictions Encompass Multiple Contract Categories
The prohibition extends well beyond athletic competitions. It encompasses contracts linked to political elections and entertainment industry outcomes.
Nevada Deputy Attorney General Jessica Whelan noted that state legislation covers wagers on “other events.” This language includes outcomes connected to awards ceremonies, television programming, film releases, and music industry developments.
Sporting event contracts represent approximately 90% of Kalshi’s overall trading activity, according to state estimates. This means the ban impacts the overwhelming majority of the platform’s commercial operations.
Woodbury’s decision represents the most recent in a series of rulings supporting state regulatory authorities over prediction market operators. On March 26, the Nevada Gaming Control Board secured a preliminary injunction against Coinbase.
Nevada has now obtained favorable court decisions against five different companies: Kalshi, Polymarket, Robinhood, Crypto.com, and Coinbase.
Courts in Ohio, Michigan, Arizona, Maryland, and Massachusetts have similarly ruled in favor of state regulators. Only two decisions, one in New Jersey and another in Tennessee, have sided with Kalshi.
The CFTC has initiated legal action against Illinois, Arizona, and Connecticut. The federal regulator contends that state efforts to regulate prediction markets encroach upon its jurisdiction under the Commodity Exchange Act.
The May 4 geofencing implementation deadline represents the next critical milestone in this case. Kalshi has not issued a public statement regarding the latest court ruling.
