LIVE UPDATE — April 17, 2026, 10:00 AM CT: The Minnesota Senate Finance Committee deadline is today at 5:00 PM. SF4474 has been formally referred to Finance as of April 9 and is expected to be heard before the deadline. Per the MN Revisor of Statutes bill tracker (updated April 13), Rules and Administration resolved its concurrent resolution hold, clearing the path for Finance Committee action. We are monitoring in real time. This article will be updated as results come in.
Sweepstakes casinos are fully legal in Minnesota today — and that remains true as of this writing. April 17, 2026 is the critical Finance Committee deadline for SF4474, the bill that could ban the dual-currency sweepstakes model in Minnesota. Here's exactly what today means, what happens next, and what Minnesota players should (and should not) do right now.
What Is the April 17 Deadline?
Minnesota's legislative calendar imposes hard deadlines for bills advancing through the Senate committee process. For SF4474, the Finance Committee must act on the bill by April 17, 2026 — or the bill is considered dead for the entire 2026 legislative session.
This is not a procedural formality. Missing this deadline means:
- SF4474 cannot be resurrected for the current session
- The Minnesota Legislature's 2026 session ends May 18, 2026
- The bill would need to be reintroduced from scratch in the 2027 session
If the Finance Committee does act and advances the bill before or on April 17, SF4474 survives — but that is only one step in a long road to becoming law.
What Happens If SF4474 Clears Finance Committee
Clearing the Finance Committee would be a significant milestone, but it is far from the finish line. Here is what must still happen before SF4474 could ban sweepstakes casinos in Minnesota:
- Full Senate floor vote — The entire Minnesota Senate must vote to pass SF4474. Floor votes are where many bills that sailed through committee ultimately die. Industry sources indicate the Senate bill "could reach a full floor vote in the coming weeks" (Covers.com, April 16, 2026).
- House companion bill (HF4410) must advance — The Senate bill and the House bill must both pass their respective chambers. HF4410 is the House companion and must clear its own committee track and floor vote independently.
- Governor's signature — Even if both chambers pass matching bills, the Governor must sign it into law. A veto kills it.
- Session deadline — All of this must happen before the session ends on May 18, 2026. With only weeks remaining on the calendar, the window is narrow.
Bottom line: Finance Committee clearance is not a ban. It would mean the bill is still alive and advancing — but there are multiple high-stakes votes remaining before sweepstakes casinos would be banned in Minnesota.
What Happens If SF4474 Fails or Misses the Deadline
If SF4474 does not clear the Finance Committee by April 17 — whether it fails a vote or simply runs out of time — the bill dies for the 2026 session.
What that means for Minnesota players:
- Sweepstakes casinos remain fully legal in Minnesota through at least the end of 2026
- No changes to how you play, redeem, or access sweepstakes platforms
- The bill could be reintroduced in the 2027 legislative session, but that would restart the entire process
A failed or lapsed SF4474 in 2026 would not preclude future legislative attempts — several states (like New Jersey) saw sweepstakes bills introduced and stall before eventually passing.
Where SF4474 Stands Right Now
SF4474 has moved faster than most observers expected. Here is the full legislative timeline, verified April 17, 2026 via the Minnesota Revisor of Statutes bill tracker:
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| March 16, 2026 | SF4474 introduced; referred to Senate Commerce and Consumer Protection Committee |
| March 25, 2026 | Cleared Commerce and Consumer Protection; re-referred to Judiciary and Public Safety |
| April 7, 2026 | Cleared Judiciary and Public Safety as amended; re-referred to State and Local Government |
| April 9, 2026 | Cleared State and Local Government; referred to Finance Committee |
| April 9, 2026 | Per Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, simultaneously referred to Rules and Administration |
| April 13, 2026 | Rules and Administration adopted previous committee report; Concurrent Resolution 6 suspended — Finance Committee path cleared |
| April 17, 2026 | Finance Committee deadline (5:00 PM CT) — act or the bill dies for 2026 |
The bill's primary sponsor, Sen. Rasmusson, has characterized SF4474 as "narrowly tailored" — it specifically targets the dual-currency sweepstakes model (Gold Coins + Sweeps Coins redeemable for prizes), while explicitly allowing standard promotional sweepstakes used by companies like McDonald's and the video game industry.
Notably, the tribal casino lobby — including the Minnesota Indian Gaming Association (MIGA) — has been among the most vocal supporters of the ban. MIGA Executive Director Andy Platto testified: "Sweeps casinos are unregulated and illegal gaming platforms that advertise here every day."
For context, several states have moved ahead of Minnesota on this issue:
- California — Sweepstakes casinos banned under AB831, effective January 1, 2026
- New Jersey — Banned August 2025 under S5935A/Ch.605
- Indiana — HB1052 signed; ban effective July 1, 2026
- Maine — LD2007 signed; ban effective approximately July 14, 2026
Minnesota would join this list if SF4474 ultimately becomes law — but it has not passed yet.
What Minnesota Players Should Do Right Now
Nothing needs to change today. Sweepstakes casinos are legal in Minnesota, and that does not change on April 17 regardless of what the Finance Committee does. Here is the practical guidance:
- Keep playing normally. No platform is shutting down in Minnesota today or tomorrow.
- Bookmark the tracker below. We are monitoring SF4474's progress in real time and will update as Finance Committee results become available.
- Don't panic-redeem. If SF4474 eventually passes all remaining hurdles and is signed into law, operators are legally required to provide redemption windows — California's operators gave players 30–90 days to redeem existing Sweeps Coins balances after that state's ban took effect.
- Watch for a Senate floor date. If the Finance Committee does advance the bill, the next major milestone will be a full Senate floor vote. That is the cleaner signal that a Minnesota ban is becoming a real possibility.
For a full list of sweepstakes casinos currently available to Minnesota residents, see our Minnesota Sweepstakes Casinos guide.
Full SF4474 Legislative Tracker
We are tracking every committee vote, deadline, and development for SF4474 in our dedicated tracker article:
Full SF4474 Legislative Tracker →
Frequently Asked Questions
Has SF4474 passed? No. SF4474 has not passed. As of April 17, 2026 at 10:00 AM CT, the bill has cleared four Senate committees and is awaiting a Finance Committee vote by the 5:00 PM deadline today. It still requires a full Senate floor vote, House companion bill (HF4410) passage, and the Governor's signature before it could become law.
Are sweepstakes casinos legal in Minnesota right now? Yes. Sweepstakes casinos are fully legal in Minnesota as of this writing. No law has been passed banning them. SF4474 is advancing through the legislative process, but it has not been signed into law — and may not be.
What does the Finance Committee vote mean? The Finance Committee is the current gatekeeper for SF4474. If the committee advances the bill by 5:00 PM on April 17, it survives and moves toward a Senate floor vote. If it does not act or votes the bill down, SF4474 dies for the 2026 session and sweepstakes casinos remain unaffected through at least the end of 2026.
What should Minnesota players do before the April 17 vote? Nothing urgent. There is no reason to rush redemptions or change your habits. If SF4474 eventually becomes law (which is not certain), operators will provide advance notice and redemption windows. The best action is to stay informed — bookmark our SF4474 tracker and check back as results come in.
Last verified: April 17, 2026 at 10:00 AM CT. Sources: Minnesota Revisor of Statutes (revisor.mn.gov/bills/94/2026/0/SF/4474/), Covers.com (April 16, 2026), Sweepsy.com (April 12–16, 2026). This article is updated as new information becomes available.