Pennsylvania Supreme Court Rules Skill Games Are Slot Machines

The state's Supreme Court ruled the 70,000 machines are slot machines, starting a 120-day clock for lawmakers to act.

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Pennsylvania's so-called skill games are slot machines in the eyes of the law, the state Supreme Court ruled on Monday, June 15, 2026 — a finding that drops the roughly 70,000 devices scattered across taverns, gas stations, and corner stores squarely under the commonwealth's gambling and criminal statutes.

The justices paired that conclusion with a reprieve: law enforcement is barred from acting on the ruling for 120 days. That four-month pause hands lawmakers a narrow window to decide the machines' fate — legalize, regulate, and tax them, or let police begin seizing them once the clock runs out.

The stakes help explain why the decision landed in the middle of budget season. The state's Independent Fiscal Office estimates that taxing the machines under a regulatory framework could eventually bring in more than $1 billion a year. Senate Republicans, who control the chamber, called gaming reform a "critical piece" of closing out this year's budget, while House Democrats and Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro said only that they were still reviewing the decision.

The Cases and the Court’s Reasoning

The court resolved two disputes at once. One traced back to 2019, when a bar and a skill games supplier petitioned for the return of machines seized by police — a fight over whether the devices rely on enough chance to count as gambling. The other came from Pace-O-Matic, a leading developer and distributor, which sued the state over its products' legality. In both, lower courts had sided with the operators, treating the games as skill-based and beyond the reach of slot-machine rules.

In a 5-2 decision, with Justice David Wecht writing for the majority, the high court rejected that view, calling the Commonwealth Court's reading "deeply flawed" and "incorrect on both points." A skill game, the justices wrote, qualifies as a slot machine "several times over," satisfying both the statutory and plain-English definitions of a coin-operated gambling device. Whatever modest role skill plays, they said, is beside the point.

Still, the justices stressed they weren't having the final say, noting the General Assembly "remains free at any time to take whatever legislative action it may deem appropriate."

The Pressure Shifts to the Legislature

With the clock running, the choice falls to Harrisburg. Pennsylvania is far from alone here — gambling laws vary widely from state to state across the US, and how lawmakers handle skill games will shape where the commonwealth lands. Lawmakers have circled a regulatory scheme for years in Pennsylvania, but a deal has never materialized...

Casinos favor a higher rate for their unregulated competition, while the skill games industry warns a heavy tax would wipe it out, along with the small businesses and veterans' organizations that depend on the revenue. Pace-O-Matic said it was "disappointed with the decision," which it believes "does not accurately reflect the facts presented."

Some lawmakers are urging caution"What we are talking about here is the potential largest expansion of gambling in Pennsylvania history since the casinos," state Rep. Ben Waxman (D., Philadelphia) told Spotlight PA. "And we cannot make short-term decisions with really long-term consequences."

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