Idaho Casinos Map
Idaho has seven tribal casinos open now, run by four Native nations, and no commercial casinos at all. Every casino in the state is tribal. This Idaho casinos map groups each operating property by region, from the Panhandle in the north down through the Clearwater valleys to the Fort Hall Reservation in the southeast. The casinos in Idaho run electronic gaming machines and bingo only, because state law bans house banked table games, so there is no live blackjack, craps, or poker anywhere. The minimum age to gamble is 21.
- Casinos
- 7all tribal · 4 nations
- Minimum age
- 21casinos; 18 for horse racing
- Table games
- Nonemachines & bingo only, by state law
- Sports betting
- Not legalno sportsbooks in Idaho
Illustration An illustrated overview, not to scale. See the interactive map below for exact locations.
How casinos are spread across Idaho
Idaho’s casinos sit on the reservations, which puts them in three corners of a long state and leaves a wide gap in the populous southwest. The northern group is in the Panhandle. The Coeur d’Alene Tribe runs the largest casino in Idaho at Worley, a full resort with a golf course about half an hour south of the city of Coeur d’Alene, and far to the north the Kootenai Tribe operates a smaller inn and casino at Bonners Ferry near the Canadian border.
The north central group follows the Clearwater River around Lewiston. The Nez Perce Tribe runs its main Clearwater River Casino near Lewiston, where Idaho meets Washington, with a smaller floor, It’se-Ye-Ye, up the river at Kamiah. These serve the Lewiston and north central valleys and draw from across the state line.
The third group is in the southeast on the Fort Hall Reservation, between Pocatello and Blackfoot. The Shoshone-Bannock Tribes run three floors there, led by the Shoshone-Bannock Casino Hotel, the largest casino in southern Idaho, with the smaller Sage Hill and Bannock Peak nearby. What stands out on any map of Idaho is the empty middle and southwest: Boise, the largest city by far, has no casino near it, because none of the reservations are close.
The Idaho casinos map
Pins Verified locations. The three Fort Hall casinos sit close together and group into a cluster until you zoom in.
Seven tribal casinos run by four nations. Idaho casinos run machines and bingo only, with no house banked table games; dated May 2026.
§ Casinos by region
The hub’s routing job. Idaho breaks cleanly into three areas, each linking down to its city and casino pages as they come online.
North Idaho and the Panhandle Worley and Bonners Ferry
The northern casinos anchor the Panhandle. The Coeur d’Alene Tribe’s resort at Worley is the largest in the state and the natural base for a trip near the city of Coeur d’Alene and the lake country, pairing the gaming floor with a hotel and a golf course. Up at Bonners Ferry, close to the Canadian border, the Kootenai Tribe runs a smaller riverside inn and casino.
North central Idaho the Clearwater River around Lewiston
Along the Clearwater, the Nez Perce Tribe runs the Clearwater River Casino near Lewiston, where the river meets the Snake at the Washington line, and a smaller floor, It’se-Ye-Ye, upstream at Kamiah. These are the casinos for the Lewiston valley and the north central part of the state.
Southeast Idaho and Fort Hall Pocatello and Blackfoot
The southeast cluster is on the Fort Hall Reservation between Pocatello and Blackfoot, where the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes run three floors. The Shoshone-Bannock Casino Hotel is the main property and the largest casino in southern Idaho, with the smaller Sage Hill and Bannock Peak floors nearby. This is the closest group to the Snake River plain and to travelers crossing the south on Interstate 15 and Interstate 86.
Casino laws and minimum age in Idaho
Idaho is one of the more restrictive gambling states, and its rules shape exactly what the casinos can offer. The state constitution bans most gambling and specifically prohibits casino style games, including blackjack, craps, roulette, poker, baccarat, keno, and mechanical slot machines. A 2002 voter initiative carved out the one path that exists today: tribes operating under state compacts may run electronic gaming machines that work on tickets rather than coins and have no handle, which is why the casinos are full of machines but have no live table games at all. All of this gaming is tribal. Idaho has no commercial casinos and no card rooms.
The Idaho Lottery and pari-mutuel horse racing are legal and run separately from the tribal casinos. Sports betting is not legal in any form in Idaho, retail or online, so there are no sportsbooks at the casinos.
The minimum age to gamble at an Idaho casino is 21. Pari-mutuel betting on horse racing is open at 18, but the casino floors are 21 and up. The larger resorts generally run their floors around the clock, though hours can vary, so check the official site and confirm the current age and rules at the specific venue before planning around them, since policies can change. Idaho also points players to problem gambling help alongside the national resources.
Dated fact Idaho casinos run electronic gaming machines and bingo only, with no house banked table games, and the minimum age is 21, per the state constitution and the tribal compacts. Verified May 2026. This is the kind of figure to recheck before relying on it.
What you can play in Idaho
The single most useful thing to know before visiting an Idaho casino is what is on the floor. Because the state bans house banked table games, an Idaho casino is machines and bingo, not a Las Vegas style pit. You will find rows of electronic gaming machines that look and play much like slots, along with video poker and video keno on those machines, plus bingo halls at the larger properties. What you will not find is a live blackjack, craps, or roulette table, or a live poker room, anywhere in the state. For a visitor used to table games, that is the key difference, and it is the same at every Idaho casino because it comes from state law rather than any one property’s choice.
Tribal gaming in Idaho
All of Idaho’s casinos are tribal, run by four of the state’s federally recognized nations under compacts approved after the 2002 initiative. The Coeur d’Alene Tribe operates the resort at Worley, the Nez Perce Tribe runs two floors along the Clearwater, the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes run three on the Fort Hall Reservation, and the Kootenai Tribe runs the inn and casino at Bonners Ferry. Because the casinos are tied to the reservations, they cluster in the north, the north central valleys, and the southeast, and they fund tribal programs and services. There is no commercial casino industry in the state to sit alongside them.
Idaho’s biggest casino
The Coeur d’Alene Casino Resort Hotel at Worley is the largest casino in Idaho, with around 100,000 square feet of gaming and roughly 1,600 machines, paired with a hotel, several restaurants, a spa, and the Circling Raven golf course. It is the closest thing the state has to a destination resort. In the south, the Shoshone-Bannock Casino Hotel near Pocatello is the largest floor, with about 900 machines and a hotel and event center. Size and machine counts shift over time, so any figure is dated on the property’s own page rather than fixed here.
Casinos near Boise
Boise and the Treasure Valley make up the largest population center in Idaho, and there is no casino near them. All of the state’s casinos sit on reservations in the north, the north central valleys, and the southeast, well away from the southwest corner. From Boise the nearest is the Shoshone-Bannock at Fort Hall, several hours east toward Pocatello. For anyone planning from the Boise area, a casino trip means a long drive within Idaho, or crossing into eastern Oregon or northern Nevada where other options sit.
Idaho casino questions
Q. How many casinos are in Idaho?
Seven tribal casinos are open as of 2026, run by four Native nations: the Coeur d'Alene, the Nez Perce, the Shoshone-Bannock, and the Kootenai. There are no commercial casinos in Idaho, so every casino in the state is tribal.
Q. What is the minimum gambling age in Idaho?
It is 21 to gamble at Idaho casinos. Pari-mutuel horse race betting is open to bettors 18 and over, but the casino floors are 21 and up. Confirm at the venue, since policies can change.
Q. Do Idaho casinos have table games?
No. Idaho law bans house banked table games, so there is no live blackjack, craps, roulette, or poker anywhere in the state. The casinos run ticket based electronic gaming machines and bingo only, which is the main thing that sets Idaho casinos apart.
Q. What is the largest casino in Idaho?
Coeur d'Alene Casino Resort Hotel at Worley, run by the Coeur d'Alene Tribe, with around 100,000 square feet of gaming and roughly 1,600 machines. The Shoshone-Bannock Casino Hotel near Pocatello is the largest in the south. Size figures are dated and treated as a snapshot.
Q. Are there casinos near Boise?
Not close. All of Idaho's casinos sit on the reservations in the north, the north central valleys, and the southeast, none of them near Boise or the populous southwest. The nearest is the Shoshone-Bannock at Fort Hall, several hours east of the Boise area.
Q. Is sports betting legal in Idaho?
No. Idaho has not legalized sports betting in any form, retail or online, so there are no sportsbooks at the casinos and no legal mobile betting in the state.
Gamble responsibly. Gambling should be entertainment, not a way to make money, and only with money you can afford to lose. If gambling stops feeling like a choice, help is free, confidential, and available 24/7. Call or text the National Problem Gambling Helpline at 1-800-MY-RESET, or visit 1800myreset.org. You must be of legal age to gamble. More on recognizing a problem and finding help.
Editorial note
Reviewed by the CasinosMap editorial desk. The casino roster, the operating tribes, the all tribal structure, the machines only rule with no house banked table games, and the legal, age, and sports betting facts were checked against current authoritative sources, not prior knowledge. The Shoshone-Bannock operate three floors on the Fort Hall Reservation; the smaller two are grouped with the main hotel casino. Counts and size figures are dated and treated as a snapshot.
Byline is a placeholder pending a named author with relevant credentials.
Sources
- Idaho Constitution, Article III, Section 20 the gambling ban and the bar on casino style table games and slot machines
- Wikipedia: List of casinos in Idaho roster cross check, cities, and tribes
- 500 Nations Idaho casino list, tribes, and machine counts
- Coeur d'Alene Casino Resort Hotel largest in the state, gaming size and machine count
- Shoshone-Bannock Casino Hotel Fort Hall property, gaming size, and the tribe's three casinos