Massachusetts State Attorney General Alleges Kalshi Violating Sports Gambling Laws

Prediction market Kalshi is violating Massachusetts’ state gambling laws, its attorney general alleged in a lawsuit Friday.

Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell alleged in a filing that sports event contracts, which Kalshi introduced in January 2025, violate the state’s sports wagering laws, which require operators to be licensed. Campbell is asking for a court to block Kalshi from offering sports prediction markets in the state without a license, as well as seeking monetary and other relief.

Prediction markets have grown in popularity over the past few years, with crypto-focused companies like Polymarket and firms like Kalshi seeing immense interest over questions such as who would win the last presidential election. While the Massachusetts filing notes that Kalshi does offer these different categories of prediction markets, its lone charge is focused on the company’s sports-related bets.

The filing said Kalshi’s prediction markets, which are structured as binary options, operate the same way licensed sports wagering operators’ products do, comparing it to FanDuel as an example.

“Kalshi is in the business of accepting wagers, defined as ‘a sum of money or thing of value risked on an uncertain occurrence’ on amateur and professional sporting events in the form of selling sporting event contracts,” the filing said, adding, “Kalshi’s sporting event contracts constitute sports wagering” as defined by Massachusetts laws and applicable regulations.

Kalshi had been through a lengthy legal tussle at the federal level when it battled with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission over the legality of its business model, but the regulator ultimately backed down earlier this year. Now, one of Kalshi’s board members, former CFTC commissioner Brian Quintenz, is President Donald Trump’s nominee to run the agency.

A portion of the Massachusetts lawsuit points to Kalshi actions the attorney general’s office alleges are designed to hook possible bettors.

“Kalshi’s platform employs behavioral design mechanisms drawn from gambling psychology, including features that encourage impulsive engagement, exploit award anticipation and diminish users’ perception of financial risk,” the filing said.

It pointed to Kalshi’s website design, including presenting possible payouts in “bright green font, a color that signals safety and correctness,” while odds were presented in black font. “This interface design subtly encourages high-risk transactions by emphasizing reward while obscuring risk.”

Campbell said “if Klashi wants to be in the sports gaming business in Massachusetts, they must obtain a license” in a statement. “Sports wagering comes with significant risk of addiction and financial loss and must be strictly regulated to mitigate public health consequences.”

In a statement, a Kalshi spokesperson said, “Kalshi offers its users a fair, transparent, federally-regulated and nationwide marketplace. Rather than engage in dialogue with Kalshi as many other states have done, Massachusetts is trying to block Kalshi’s innovations by relying on outdated laws and ideas. Prediction markets are a critical innovation of the 21st century, and all Americans should be able to access them. We are proud to be the company that has pioneered this technology and stand ready to defend it once again in a court of law.”