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Oregon Casinos Map

Oregon has ten tribal casinos open now, run by eight Native nations, and no commercial casinos at all. The state constitution bans them, so every casino floor in Oregon is tribal. This Oregon casinos map groups each operating property by region, from the coastal floors at Lincoln City and Florence to Spirit Mountain in the valley, the Interstate 5 run through the south, and Wildhorse out east near Pendleton. The minimum age to gamble is 21 across the state.

Casinos
10all tribal · 8 nations
Minimum age
21floor; 18 for poker or bingo at some venues
Sports betting
Legalmobile & retail, 21+
Commercial casinos
Bannedby the state constitution
Illustration Oregon · not to scale

Illustration An illustrated overview, not to scale. See the interactive map below for exact locations.

How casinos are spread across Oregon

Oregon’s casinos follow the coast, the Interstate corridors, and the reservations, rather than gathering in any one resort town. The heaviest run sits along the Pacific. Chinook Winds rises above the beach at Lincoln City on the central coast, run by the Siletz, and further south the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw operate Three Rivers at Florence with a smaller satellite floor down in Coos Bay. On the same bay at North Bend, the Coquille run Ko-Kwel Coos Bay, the property long known as The Mill Casino until a 2025 rebrand.

Inland, the one casino closest to the Willamette Valley and to Portland is Spirit Mountain at Grand Ronde, off Highway 18 on the way to the coast. Run by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, it is the largest and busiest casino in the state and a regular day trip from the Portland and Salem metros, neither of which has a casino of its own.

The southern half of the state is organized around Interstate 5. Seven Feathers sits right on the freeway at Canyonville, run by the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua, and is the obvious stop for anyone driving the I-5 spine. Further south the Coquille opened a second casino, Ko-Kwel Medford, in January 2025, and east toward Crater Lake the Klamath Tribes run Kla-Mo-Ya on Highway 97 at Chiloquin.

The interior and the east are thinner but distinct. Indian Head sits in central Oregon at Warm Springs on Highway 26, run by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, and far to the northeast the Umatilla operate Wildhorse near Pendleton off Interstate 84. Two former casinos are now closed, Kah-Nee-Ta in the Warm Springs country and Old Camp at Burns, which has been shut since 2012, and the Warm Springs tribes have long proposed a casino at Cascade Locks in the Columbia Gorge that has not been built.

The Oregon casinos map

Interactive Verified locations · click a pin Leaflet · phase 2

Pins Verified locations. The coastal and southern Oregon properties pin individually; zoom in to separate the Coos Bay area floors.

PropertyAreaType
Spirit Mountain Casino
The largest and busiest casino in Oregon, off Highway 18 between Salem and the coast
Grand Ronde
Tribal
Chinook Winds Casino Resort
On the central coast at Lincoln City, overlooking the Pacific
Coast
Tribal
Three Rivers Casino Resort
Central coast at Florence, the tribe's full resort property
Coast
Tribal
Three Rivers Casino Coos Bay
Smaller south coast satellite floor at Coos Bay
Coast
Tribal
Ko-Kwel Casino Resort Coos Bay
On Coos Bay at North Bend, known as The Mill Casino until the 2025 rebrand
Coast
Tribal
Seven Feathers Casino Resort
Right off Interstate 5 at Canyonville, the main stop in the south
Interstate 5 south
Tribal
Ko-Kwel Casino Medford
Southern Oregon, opened January 2025 in a former Medford bowling alley
Southern Oregon
Tribal
Kla-Mo-Ya Casino
On Highway 97 north of Klamath Falls, near Crater Lake
Southern Oregon
Tribal
Indian Head Casino
Central Oregon, on Highway 26 between Madras and Mount Hood
Central Oregon
Tribal
Wildhorse Resort & Casino
Eastern Oregon, off Interstate 84 near Pendleton
Eastern Oregon
Tribal

Ten tribal casinos run by eight nations. Counts and rosters drift with openings, closures, and rebrands; dated May 2026.


§ Casinos by region

The hub’s routing job. Oregon breaks into a handful of areas, each linking down to its city and casino pages as they come online.

The Oregon coast Highway 101 · Lincoln City to Coos Bay

The densest run in the state. Chinook Winds anchors the central coast at Lincoln City, with the Pacific out the windows. South of there, Three Rivers serves Florence and runs a smaller floor in Coos Bay, while the Coquille’s Ko-Kwel Coos Bay sits across the water at North Bend. For a coast trip these four are the natural bases, strung along Highway 101.

Grand Ronde and the valley closest to Portland and Salem

Spirit Mountain at Grand Ronde is the casino for the Willamette Valley, set off Highway 18 between Salem and the coast. It is the largest and most visited floor in Oregon and the closest one to Portland, which has no casino of its own. This is the default stop for a short trip from the valley metros.

Interstate 5 and southern Oregon Canyonville, Medford, Chiloquin

Seven Feathers sits directly on Interstate 5 at Canyonville, the main casino stop on the drive between the valley and California. Down in the Rogue Valley the Coquille’s Ko-Kwel Medford opened in 2025, and over toward Crater Lake the Klamath Tribes run Kla-Mo-Ya on Highway 97 at Chiloquin, north of Klamath Falls.

Central and eastern Oregon Warm Springs and Pendleton

Indian Head sits in central Oregon at Warm Springs on Highway 26, between Madras and the Mount Hood corridor, run by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Far to the northeast, the Umatilla operate Wildhorse off Interstate 84 near Pendleton, the main casino for eastern Oregon and travelers crossing the state on the freeway.


Casino laws and minimum age in Oregon

Oregon does not allow commercial casinos. A 1984 amendment to the state constitution directs the legislature to prohibit them outright, so there is no Las Vegas style private casino industry and there will not be one without a change to the constitution. All casino gaming in the state is tribal, run under the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act and compacts each tribe negotiates with the state. By the late 1990s all nine of Oregon’s federally recognized tribes had signed compacts, and eight of them operate the casinos open today.

Two other forms of legal gambling are easy to confuse with casinos but are not. The Oregon Lottery runs video lottery terminals and Keno in bars, taverns, and restaurants across the state, and it operates the statewide sports betting app. Those terminals are not a casino floor and are regulated separately from tribal gaming.

The minimum age to gamble is 21 on the casino floor at every Oregon casino. Some properties open poker or bingo to players 18 and over, but slots and table games are 21 and up. Hours vary, though the larger resorts generally run their floors around the clock, so check the official site and confirm the current age and rules at the specific venue before planning around them, since policies can change. Oregon also funds free problem gambling treatment through the Oregon Health Authority alongside the national resources.

Dated fact Minimum age 21 on the casino floor at every Oregon casino, with poker or bingo at 18 at some venues, per the casinos’ own published rules. Verified May 2026. This is the kind of figure to recheck before relying on it.


All tribal: how gaming works in Oregon

Because commercial casinos are barred, Oregon’s casinos are owned and run by Native nations on tribal land, eight of them across the ten properties open now. Most run full Class III gaming, the slots and table games covered by their state compacts, and a couple of the smaller floors lean on Class II bingo based machines. The result is a set of casinos tied to where the reservations and tribal lands are, which is why they sit on the coast, in the southern valleys, in central Oregon, and out east rather than in the big cities. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, the Siletz, the Coquille, the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw, the Cow Creek, the Klamath, the Warm Springs, and the Umatilla each run at least one floor, and the Coquille and the Coos tribes each run two.

Oregon’s biggest casino

Spirit Mountain at Grand Ronde holds the largest gaming floor in Oregon and has for years ranked among the most visited tourist destinations in the state. Run by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, it pairs the big floor with a hotel, dining, and an events lineup, and its position between Salem and the coast on Highway 18 puts it within easy reach of the valley’s population. Size and ranking figures shift with expansions, so any square footage or machine count is dated on the property’s own page rather than fixed here.

Casinos near Portland

Portland itself has no casino, and neither does anywhere in its metro, a direct result of the constitutional ban on commercial casinos. The nearest Oregon casino is Spirit Mountain at Grand Ronde, roughly an hour and a half southwest of the city. Many Portland area visitors instead cross the Columbia River into Washington, where ilani at La Center sits about half an hour north of downtown and is the largest casino in the region. For planning from Portland, those are the two realistic options, one in Oregon and one just over the state line.

Sports betting in Oregon

Sports betting is legal in Oregon. The statewide mobile app runs through DraftKings under a contract with the Oregon Lottery, and several tribal casinos take bets too, both at retail sportsbooks on the floor and through their own online books under their compacts. The minimum age for sports betting is 21, the same as the casino floor. For a visitor that means you can bet on your phone almost anywhere in the state or at a sportsbook counter inside one of the larger casinos.


Oregon casino questions

Q. How many casinos are in Oregon?

Ten tribal casinos are open as of 2026, run by eight Native nations, spread from the coast to eastern Oregon. There are no commercial casinos. Oregon's constitution bans them, so every casino floor in the state is tribal.

Q. What is the minimum gambling age in Oregon?

It is 21 on the casino floor at every Oregon casino. A few venues allow 18 and over for poker or for bingo, but slots and table games are 21 and up. Confirm at the venue, since policies can change.

Q. Are there casinos in Portland?

No. There are no casinos in Portland or anywhere in the Portland metro. The closest is Spirit Mountain at Grand Ronde, about an hour and a half southwest, and many Portland visitors also cross the Columbia River to ilani in La Center, Washington, roughly half an hour north.

Q. What is the largest casino in Oregon?

Spirit Mountain Casino at Grand Ronde, run by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, has the largest gaming floor in the state and is one of Oregon's most visited destinations. Size figures are dated and treated as a snapshot.

Q. Are all Oregon casinos tribal?

Yes. A 1984 amendment to the state constitution prohibits commercial casinos, so all casino style gaming in Oregon is run by federally recognized tribes under compacts with the state. The Oregon Lottery also runs video lottery terminals in bars and taverns, but those are not casinos.

Q. Is sports betting legal in Oregon?

Yes. Statewide mobile sports betting runs through DraftKings under the Oregon Lottery, and some tribal casinos take retail and online bets under their own compacts. The minimum age for sports betting is 21.

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.

How this page was verified

Editorial note

Reviewed by the CasinosMap editorial desk. The casino roster, the operating tribes, the all tribal structure, and the legal and age facts were checked against current authoritative sources, not prior knowledge. Closures (Kah-Nee-Ta and Old Camp at Burns) and the proposed Columbia Gorge casino are noted rather than counted. Counts are dated and treated as a snapshot, since the Coquille Tribe's Medford casino opened only in January 2025 and rosters drift.

Byline is a placeholder pending a named author with relevant credentials.

Sources

Last updated May 2026 Next scheduled review Aug 2026 Found an error? Request a correction