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Wisconsin Casinos Map

Every casino in Wisconsin is tribal, more than twenty of them run by the state’s eleven Native nations, from the Potawatomi’s big floor in downtown Milwaukee to the Ojibwe casinos in the north woods. This Wisconsin casinos map groups every property by region, from the Ho-Chunk casinos through the center of the state to the resorts on Lake Superior. The minimum age to gamble is 21 everywhere, and tribal sportsbooks now take bets in person at several casinos.

Casinos
24+all tribal · 11 nations
Minimum age
21casino & sports betting · 18 bingo
Sports betting
Retailseveral casinos · online not live yet
Regulator
Tribaltribal-state compacts
Illustration Wisconsin · not to scale

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

How casinos are spread across Wisconsin

Wisconsin’s casinos are entirely tribal, run by eleven Native nations under compacts with the state, so they follow the reservations and tribal land rather than a single resort strip. They split loosely between the Ojibwe bands of the northern lakes and forests and the nations of the south and east, the Ho-Chunk, Oneida, Potawatomi, Menominee, and Stockbridge-Munsee, who hold the casinos nearest the cities.

The single biggest draw is in the city. The Forest County Potawatomi run Potawatomi Casino Hotel in downtown Milwaukee, the largest casino in the state and the only major floor in the southeast corner. Up the lakeshore, Green Bay anchors the northeast, where the Oneida Nation runs several casinos around the city and airport, with the Menominee, Stockbridge-Munsee, and Forest County Potawatomi adding resorts in the woods north and west of it.

Through the center of the state, the Ho-Chunk Nation runs the widest spread of any tribe, with casinos at Wisconsin Dells, Madison, Black River Falls, Nekoosa, Tomah, and Wittenberg. The Wisconsin Dells floor is the largest of them and sits in the state’s biggest tourist town, while the Madison casino puts gaming in the capital. These are the casinos most travelers on Interstates 90 and 94 pass.

The north is Ojibwe country. In the northwest, the St. Croix Chippewa run three casinos near the Minnesota line, and across the northern lakes the Lac du Flambeau and Lac Courte Oreilles bands run resorts at Lac du Flambeau and Hayward. On the Lake Superior shore at the top of the state, the Red Cliff and Bad River bands run Legendary Waters near the Apostle Islands and Bad River near Ashland. The reservations are rural, so these casinos are often the main draw and a major employer for their region.

The Wisconsin casinos map

Interactive Verified locations · click a pin Leaflet · phase 2

Pins Verified locations. The Green Bay and Hayward casinos sit close together and group into clusters until you zoom in.

PropertyAreaType
Potawatomi Casino Hotel
Largest casino in Wisconsin, downtown Milwaukee, with a sportsbook
Milwaukee and the southeast
Tribal
Oneida Casino (Main / Airport)
Flagship of the Oneida casinos by the Green Bay airport, first Wisconsin sportsbook
Green Bay and the northeast
Tribal
Menominee Casino Resort
Resort northwest of Green Bay on the Menominee Reservation
Green Bay and the northeast
Tribal
North Star Mohican Casino Resort
Resort west of Green Bay
Green Bay and the northeast
Tribal
Potawatomi Casino Hotel Carter
North woods sister property to the Milwaukee casino
Green Bay and the northeast
Tribal
Mole Lake Casino
Northeast woods at Mole Lake
Green Bay and the northeast
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Wisconsin Dells
Largest of the Ho-Chunk casinos, at Wisconsin Dells
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Madison
In the state capital, a slots focused floor
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Black River Falls
West central, off Interstate 94
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Nekoosa
Central Wisconsin near Wisconsin Rapids
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Tomah
West central at the Interstate 90 and 94 split
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
Ho-Chunk Gaming Wittenberg
East central, off Highway 29 toward Wausau
Central and southern Wisconsin
Tribal
St. Croix Casino Turtle Lake
Flagship of the St. Croix casinos, with a sportsbook
The northwest
Tribal
St. Croix Casino Danbury
Far northwest near the Minnesota line
The northwest
Tribal
St. Croix Casino Hertel
Smaller northwest floor at Hertel
The northwest
Tribal
Lake of the Torches Resort Casino
North woods resort, with a DraftKings sportsbook
Northern lakes and Lake Superior
Tribal
Sevenwinds Casino, Lodge & Conference Center
Resort near Hayward in the northern lakes
Northern lakes and Lake Superior
Tribal
Grindstone Creek Casino
Smaller sister floor to Sevenwinds at Hayward
Northern lakes and Lake Superior
Tribal
Legendary Waters Resort & Casino
On Lake Superior near Bayfield and the Apostle Islands
Northern lakes and Lake Superior
Tribal
Bad River Lodge & Casino
Far north on Lake Superior near Ashland
Northern lakes and Lake Superior
Tribal

Around two dozen Wisconsin casinos run by eleven tribes; the Oneida and Ho-Chunk run a few additional small satellite floors not listed individually. Ho-Chunk Beloit (due September 2026) and a proposed Hard Rock Kenosha are not yet operating. Rosters drift; dated May 2026.


§ Casinos by region

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

Milwaukee and the southeast the city · Lake Michigan

The state’s flagship floor. The Forest County Potawatomi run Potawatomi Casino Hotel in the Menomonee Valley just west of downtown Milwaukee, with around 3,000 slot machines, a large table and poker floor, a sportsbook, a hotel, and a concert and event space. It is the largest casino in Wisconsin and the only major one in the populous southeast, which is also why the proposed Hard Rock in Kenosha to the south has drawn so much attention.

Green Bay and the northeast the Oneida and the north woods nations

Green Bay is the second hub. The Oneida Nation runs several casinos around the city, led by the Main and Airport location that opened the first sportsbook in the state. North and west of the city the woods nations add resorts: the Menominee at Keshena, the Stockbridge-Munsee at Bowler, the Forest County Potawatomi at Carter near Wabeno, and the Sokaogon Chippewa at Mole Lake near Crandon.

Central and southern Wisconsin the Ho-Chunk casinos

The Ho-Chunk Nation runs the widest spread in the state, the casinos most travelers reach first. Ho-Chunk Wisconsin Dells, near Baraboo, is the largest and sits in the state’s top tourist town, and Ho-Chunk Madison puts a floor in the capital. The rest, at Black River Falls, Nekoosa, Tomah, and Wittenberg, line the interstates through central Wisconsin. A large new Ho-Chunk resort in Beloit, on the Illinois line, is due to open in September 2026.

The northwest near the Minnesota line

The St. Croix Chippewa run three casinos in the rolling country of the northwest, the closest Wisconsin casinos to the Twin Cities. Turtle Lake is the flagship and carries a sportsbook, with smaller floors at Danbury and Hertel near Webster further north toward the St. Croix River.

The northern lakes and Lake Superior Ojibwe country

The north is the domain of the Lake Superior Chippewa bands. The Lac du Flambeau Band runs Lake of the Torches in the lake country, and the Lac Courte Oreilles Band runs Sevenwinds and the smaller Grindstone Creek near Hayward. At the top of the state on Lake Superior, the Red Cliff Band runs Legendary Waters near Bayfield and the Apostle Islands, and the Bad River Band runs its lodge and casino near Ashland.


Casino laws and minimum age in Wisconsin

Wisconsin has no commercial casinos. All gaming is tribal, run by the eleven federally recognized nations under compacts negotiated with the state, a framework that dates to the early 1990s after a state lottery amendment opened the door to Indian gaming. The casinos offer slots, blackjack, other table games, poker, and bingo, and several now run retail sportsbooks. There is no state run casino and no legal online casino play.

The minimum age to gamble is 21 for the casino floor, poker, and sports betting, and 18 for bingo. Unlike neighboring Minnesota, where 18 is common, Wisconsin’s casinos are consistently 21 and up on the main floor, in part because they serve alcohol. Sports betting is legal in person at several casinos, and in April 2026 the state legalized tribal run statewide online betting, though it cannot start until the compacts are updated. Hours vary by property, though the larger resorts generally run 24/7. Confirm the current age and rules at the specific venue, since each nation sets its own and they can change.

Dated fact Minimum age 21 for the casino floor, poker, and sports betting, 18 for bingo, across Wisconsin’s tribal casinos. Online sports betting was legalized in April 2026 but is not yet live as of May 2026. Recheck before relying on it.


Tribal gaming in Wisconsin

Wisconsin’s casinos are run by eleven nations, and the split between them shapes the map. Seven are Ojibwe, or Chippewa, bands of the north: Bad River, Red Cliff, Lac du Flambeau, Lac Courte Oreilles, St. Croix, Sokaogon, and the Lake Superior bands hold the lakes and forests across the top of the state. The others sit south and east, where the people are: the Ho-Chunk Nation with its wide spread through the center, the Oneida Nation around Green Bay, the Forest County Potawatomi in Milwaukee and the north woods, the Menominee at Keshena, and the Stockbridge-Munsee at Bowler. The compacts let each nation run its own gaming and keep the revenue, which has funded tribal government, health care, and community services, and it is why the casinos sit on tribal land rather than in a commercial gaming district.

The biggest casinos and what is coming

Potawatomi Casino Hotel in Milwaukee is the largest casino in Wisconsin, with roughly 3,000 slot machines and the deepest table and poker offering in the state, set in the Menomonee Valley near downtown. Ho-Chunk Wisconsin Dells is among the next largest, with more than 2,000 machines in the state’s busiest tourist town. The picture is about to shift: the Ho-Chunk Nation is finishing a 705 million dollar casino, hotel, and conference center in Beloit on the Illinois border, due to open in September 2026 and expected to become one of the largest in the state. Further south, the Menominee and Hard Rock have a long running proposal for a casino in Kenosha that cleared local approval and is in federal review, with no final decision yet, so it is a plan rather than a casino for now.

Sports betting in Wisconsin

Sports betting in Wisconsin runs through the tribes. Retail sportsbooks have operated since 2021, when the Oneida Nation opened the first at its Green Bay airport casino, and others followed at the St. Croix casinos, Potawatomi in Milwaukee, and Lake of the Torches at Lac du Flambeau. For most of that time betting meant standing at a casino counter or kiosk. That is set to change: in April 2026 the governor signed a law allowing the eleven tribes to offer statewide mobile sports betting, but it cannot launch until the state and each nation negotiate updated compacts, so there is no live online betting and no firm start date yet. Until then, a legal sports bet in Wisconsin still has to be placed on a casino floor.


Wisconsin casino questions

Q. How many casinos are in Wisconsin?

Around two dozen, and all of them are tribal, run by the state's eleven Native nations. There are no commercial casinos. A large new Ho-Chunk casino in Beloit is set to open in September 2026, and a Hard Rock in Kenosha is proposed but not yet approved, so treat the count as a snapshot dated 2026.

Q. What is the minimum gambling age in Wisconsin?

It is 21 for the casino floor, poker, and sports betting, and 18 for bingo. The age is consistent across the tribal casinos. Confirm at the venue, since policies can change.

Q. What is the largest casino in Wisconsin?

Potawatomi Casino Hotel in downtown Milwaukee, with around 3,000 slot machines plus a large table and poker floor and a hotel. Ho-Chunk Wisconsin Dells is among the next largest, and the new Ho-Chunk Beloit is expected to rank near the top once it opens in late 2026.

Q. Where are Wisconsin's casinos?

Spread across the state. Potawatomi anchors Milwaukee, the Oneida and several other casinos ring Green Bay and the northeast, the seven Ho-Chunk casinos run through the center near the Dells and Madison, the St. Croix casinos sit in the northwest, and the Ojibwe casinos spread across the northern lakes and the Lake Superior shore.

Q. Can you bet on sports in Wisconsin?

Yes, in person at several tribal casinos, where retail sportsbooks have run since 2021, including the Oneida, St. Croix, Potawatomi, and Lake of the Torches casinos. Wisconsin legalized tribal run statewide online sports betting in April 2026, but it has not launched yet, because the state and the tribes must first update their gaming compacts.

Q. Is online casino gambling legal in Wisconsin?

No. Online casino play is not legal in Wisconsin. The only online expansion is the tribal sports betting approved in 2026, which is not yet live. The tribal casinos themselves remain the legal places to gamble.

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 all tribal roster, the eleven operating nations, the regions, the consistent 21 and over age, the retail sportsbooks, and the status of the 2026 online sports betting law were checked against current authoritative sources, not prior knowledge. The casino count is given as a range because the tribes run small satellite floors and two large projects are pending: Ho-Chunk Beloit, due in September 2026, and a proposed Hard Rock in Kenosha that is not yet approved. Both are kept out of the operating roster. Counts are dated and treated as a snapshot.

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

Sources

  • Wisconsin Dept. of Administration, Office of Indian Gaming tribal-state compacts and the casino location map
  • Tribal and casino listings the full casino roster by tribe and location
  • PBS Wisconsin / state coverage Assembly Bill 601, tribal online sports betting signed April 2026
  • American Gaming Association Wisconsin gaming regulatory fact sheet and minimum age
Last updated May 2026 Next scheduled review Aug 2026 Found an error? Request a correction