Backed by Caesars Entertainment with Caesars Rewards integration. A casino-heritage sportsbook with strong early-market pricing on certain verticals and its own distinct identity among US operators.
This review is an independent editorial opinion based on publicly available information and industry reporting. It is not written by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Caesars Sportsbook or Caesars Entertainment. See our methodology for our full review process.
Caesars Sportsbook is operated by Caesars Entertainment and was built on the infrastructure Caesars acquired when it bought William Hill in 2021. The product carries a distinct identity in the US market: strong Caesars Rewards integration for users who engage with Caesars-branded casino properties, historically aggressive early-market pricing on certain sports (particularly baseball and pre-season NFL), and a user experience that sits somewhere between the casino-focused BetMGM and the DFS-native DraftKings/FanDuel. The Manning brothers (Peyton and Eli) have been the face of the brand for several years, which has driven strong mindshare relative to market share.
Best for: Caesars Rewards members (especially Diamond tier and above), Las Vegas visitors who stay at Caesars-branded properties, users who value aggressive early-week pricing on baseball and NFL.
Consider alternatives if: You want the widest market selection (DraftKings has more), you want the most polished app (FanDuel is ahead), or you're primarily casino-focused without a tie to Caesars properties.
The most distinctive strength is Caesars Rewards integration. Every bet placed at Caesars Sportsbook earns Tier Credits and Reward Credits that unlock across the entire Caesars Entertainment ecosystem: Caesars Palace, Harrah's, Horseshoe, Flamingo, Paris, Bally's, Tropicana, and dozens of regional properties. Diamond tier members get priority service lines, premium seating access, and airport lounge benefits that can meaningfully exceed the face value of the loyalty math. For a regular Vegas visitor or someone with a Caesars-branded casino nearby, the earning rate on sportsbook bets often beats what you'd net from any rewards card or other loyalty program.
Early-market pricing on baseball has historically been a Caesars strength. The company inherited a strong trading operation from William Hill (which had been one of the sharper books in the US market before the acquisition), and that legacy shows up in how Caesars prices early-week MLB totals and moneylines. Sharp bettors who follow early-market movement often watched Caesars as an early indicator before lines settled at other operators. This advantage has narrowed as the other books have invested in trading, but it hasn't disappeared entirely.
The Manning brothers marketing campaign deserves specific mention because it's genuinely good. The commercials are funny, the tone is different from the generic celebrity-endorsement approach other books take, and the "Cesar" Roman character played by J.B. Smoove became a recognizable brand asset. None of this improves the product itself, but it has driven strong brand recognition and made Caesars a book people actively consider rather than default past.
The retail sportsbook presence is meaningful. Caesars operates in-person sportsbooks at properties across the US (Las Vegas, Atlantic City, and regional casinos in many states). For users who visit those properties, the ability to place retail bets, collect winnings at the cage, and earn identical rewards credit as online betting creates a seamless experience that a pure online operator can't match. This matters particularly for Vegas visitors and for older bettors who still prefer in-person wagering.
Market coverage is thinner than DraftKings and FanDuel on a per-game basis. For an NFL game you'll get the standard menu, but prop depth, alternate line variety, and same-game parlay flexibility are noticeably less extensive than at the top two operators. For mid-tier sports (college basketball outside marquee games, smaller soccer leagues, some international events) the gap widens. A bettor who likes to explore niche markets will find Caesars more limiting.
App quality has been inconsistent. The current app works and has improved significantly since the post-William-Hill rebuild, but it's historically had more user-reported stability issues than FanDuel or DraftKings, and the interface design is functional rather than particularly polished. For a user who values the smoothness of the product experience, Caesars sits in the middle of the pack rather than at the top.
Account limiting applies at Caesars just as it does at all major US books. There's a specific twist worth mentioning: according to industry observers and community reports, Caesars has historically had one of the more active sharp-detection processes among US operators, a legacy of the William Hill risk management infrastructure inherited during the 2021 acquisition. Winning players and arbitrage bettors tend to see limits relatively quickly. For a recreational user this doesn't matter; for anyone trying to size bets based on edge, Caesars will likely restrict sooner than FanDuel or BetMGM might.
The rewards program's value depends heavily on where you live and travel. If you're a Diamond or Seven Stars member, or if you live near a Caesars regional property, the integration is genuinely valuable. If you don't visit Caesars properties and don't plan to, the Tier Credits and Reward Credits have less meaningful utility. For a pure online-only user, the loyalty math is weaker than the headline numbers suggest.
Caesars Sportsbook operates in most US states where mobile sports betting is legal and where Caesars has been granted a license. Coverage includes New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Colorado, Iowa, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, Arizona, Louisiana, Maryland, Ohio, Kansas, Kentucky, Nevada, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Carolina, Maine, Wyoming, and Washington D.C. In Canada, Caesars operates in Ontario under iGO regulation.
The Caesars Entertainment parent company has a long regulatory history across US gaming jurisdictions given its decades-old casino operations. Sportsbook licensing has generally followed quickly when new states opened. The company is audited under state gaming commission rules, uses standard geolocation enforcement, and follows KYC/AML requirements at signup and at various withdrawal thresholds.
Internationally, Caesars Sportsbook (US) is separate from the William Hill brand, which Caesars Entertainment sold the international operations of to 888 Holdings in 2022. A US Caesars account does not work outside the US/Canada, and the William Hill brand in the UK/Europe is a separate company operating under separate licenses.
The mobile app covers all the standard ground: moneyline, spread, total, quarter and half markets, team totals, and player props for major US sports. Same-game parlays are supported. Futures markets include championship winners, season awards, and season win totals for the major leagues. For day-to-day betting on the biggest games, Caesars has everything you need.
The specific gap versus DraftKings and FanDuel shows up in market depth. On a given NFL Sunday game, DraftKings and FanDuel might offer 300+ markets while Caesars offers 150-200. For most bettors that's irrelevant (you're not betting 300 markets anyway), but if you have a specific prop in mind that isn't on Caesars' menu, you'll need to shop elsewhere.
Live betting is competent. Markets update in near-real-time, cash-out is supported on most open bets, and in-play coverage for major events (NFL Sunday, NBA playoffs) is broad. The experience is functional rather than exceptional, in line with the overall app positioning.
The retail integration is a unique feature. If you're at a Caesars property, you can place bets in the app or at the physical sportsbook, and all wagers feed the same Caesars Rewards account. For Vegas visitors this is genuinely useful; it's also one of the few places where Caesars has a clear feature advantage over DraftKings and FanDuel.
Caesars runs a steady promotional calendar, with more emphasis than most competitors on Caesars Rewards-linked offers. Typical promos include profit boosts on specific markets, odds boosts on featured parlays, risk-free first-bet structures for new users, and Reward Credit multipliers for qualifying bets. Promo activity peaks around major events and significant property-specific moments (Super Bowl weekend at Caesars Palace, major UFC events in Las Vegas).
Payout speeds are comparable to other major US operators. PayPal typically processes same-day. ACH takes one to three business days. Play+ is near-instant. In-person cage withdrawals at Caesars properties are immediate and often uncapped, which is a genuine benefit for Vegas visitors who can walk to the cage and cash out a large sum directly. First withdrawals trigger identity verification.
Deposits support credit/debit card, PayPal, ACH, online banking, Play+, and in-person cash at Caesars property cages. The in-person cage option is useful for users who prefer not to link bank accounts or card details and is functionally unique to operators with physical casino footprints.
If you're a Caesars Rewards member (particularly Diamond or Seven Stars), the integration is the reason to use Caesars. Earning Tier Credits on bets you were going to place anyway, with those credits cashing in for comps, room upgrades, and premium service at Caesars properties, is a legitimate edge for the right user. For Vegas regulars, this is often enough reason to make Caesars the primary book even if the app experience isn't quite as slick as FanDuel's.
If you bet baseball early in the week (Sunday night / Monday morning when lines first post for the week ahead), Caesars' early-market pricing is worth watching. Limits are usually low on those initial markets, but for small-to-mid-sized bets, you'll occasionally catch value that settles out at other books over the next day or two.
If you regularly visit Caesars-branded properties and value seamless retail-plus-online betting, the unified account experience is meaningful. Few online operators can match the ability to walk up to a physical cage and cash out winnings in a few minutes.
Caesars is not the right primary book if you want the widest market depth, the most polished app, or the most aggressive promo calendar. DraftKings and FanDuel are ahead on those dimensions. Caesars works best as one of two or three books in a multi-account approach, used specifically for the rewards integration and for markets where their pricing is competitive.
Caesars appears alongside every other licensed sportsbook available in your region on the live odds page. For any given market, the Caesars price shows next to DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, bet365, and every other book, with the best-available price highlighted. This makes it easy to see when Caesars is pricing a market sharper than the field (which happens on certain early baseball and preseason NFL markets) and when another book has a better number.
For users running a multi-account approach (keeping Caesars for the Rewards integration plus one or two other books for broader market coverage), the comparison is designed to route each bet to whichever book has the best price at the moment of placement. The line shopping guide covers the math of why this matters over a full season.
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This review is for informational purposes only and is not betting advice. Sportsbook features, promotions, state availability, and commercial terms change over time; check Caesars Sportsbook directly for current offerings in your state. Compare n' Bet may earn commissions from affiliate relationships with sportsbooks reviewed on this site (see the methodology page for full disclosure). Caesars Sportsbook, Caesars Rewards, Caesars Entertainment, and all related marks are the property of Caesars Entertainment, Inc. Compare n' Bet is an independent comparison platform and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Caesars. Sports betting involves financial risk. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call 1-800-522-4700 or visit ncpgambling.org.