DraftKings and BetMGM Launch Competing First-Bet Bonuses for Packed Saturday Slate
DraftKings and BetMGM are offering competing first-bet bonuses for Saturday's slate of NBA playoffs, NHL, and MLB action, underscoring the intensifying customer acquisition battle between the two largest US sportsbooks.

DraftKings and BetMGM, the two dominant operators in the US legal sports betting market, launched competing first-bet bonus offers on Saturday, 25 April 2026, targeting customers drawn by a congested slate of NBA playoffs, NHL regular-season action, and the opening weekend of the 2026 MLB season.
The simultaneous promotions arrive as the legal sports betting industry, now in its ninth year since the 2018 PASPA reversal, continues to consolidate around a handful of large platforms competing for a finite base of active bettors. Customer acquisition costs remain elevated, and both DraftKings and BetMGM have leaned heavily into first-bet bonuses as their primary onboarding tool.
The Saturday Offers
DraftKings is offering $300 in bonus bets to new customers who place a first wager of $5 or more on Saturday's games. The offer applies to three marquee matchups: the Atlanta Hawks at New York Knicks (NBA playoffs), the Denver Nuggets at Minnesota Timberwolves (NBA playoffs), and the Pittsburgh Penguins at Philadelphia Flyers (NHL). According to the promotional terms, the bonus bets are credited immediately upon settlement of the qualifying wager.
BetMGM, meanwhile, is offering $150 in bonus bets using the promotional code CBSSPORTS for new accounts. The offer covers NBA action, specifically Knicks-Hawks, as well as MLB games including Dodgers at Cubs, and Nuggets-Timberwolves. The differential in bonus size—$300 versus $150—reflects the differing acquisition strategies and margin tolerances of the two operators.
Competitive Dynamics in a Crowded Market
The simultaneous launch of competing offers is not coincidental. DraftKings and BetMGM, which together command a significant share of the regulated US sports betting handle, routinely match or exceed each other's promotional calendar, particularly around high-traffic weekends. A packed Saturday featuring NBA playoff games, NHL regional rivalry matchups, and MLB opening-series action represents precisely the kind of multi-sport environment that drives new account signups across the industry.
The offers are calibrated differently. DraftKings requires a $5 minimum stake and delivers a larger bonus; BetMGM accepts the same qualifying events but delivers a smaller credit. For first-time bettors, the DraftKings offer provides more immediate bonus value, though bonus bets typically carry wagering requirements before withdrawal—terms that vary by operator and are disclosed in the offer's fine print.
Both platforms are competing not only against each other but against a broader ecosystem of legal sportsbooks, including FanDuel, Caesars, and a tier of regional operators that have gained traction in state-specific markets. The sheer volume of competing offers has made brand recognition and promotional generosity primary differentiators for customers deciding which platform to fund first.
The Business Logic of First-Bet Bonuses
First-bet bonuses remain the industry's dominant customer acquisition vehicle despite their cost. Operators absorb the bonus credit as a marketing expense, betting that the lifetime value of a converted customer—across repeated deposits, bet turnover, and engagement with casino or other gaming products—exceeds the upfront incentive.
The strategy has proven durable. Legal sports betting operators reported collective handle growth through 2025 even as promotional spending intensified, suggesting that the market for regulated betting continues to expand despite—or in some cases because of—the promotional arms race. Regulators in several states have introduced responsible gaming safeguards tied to bonus offers, including cooling-off periods and mandatory loss-limit disclosures, without curtailing the use of such incentives.
What the Offers Signal
Saturday's simultaneous promotions confirm that the legal sports betting market remains firmly in growth mode, with the major platforms willing to sacrifice near-term margin to build their registered-user base. For bettors, the offers represent a genuine, albeit bounded, opportunity: a risk-reduced entry point to legal wagering, with bonus funds that can generate winnings if the qualifying bets settle favorably.
The longer-term question is whether the promotional intensity is sustainable. As the regulated market matures and the pool of first-time bettors shrinks, operators will face pressure to retain customers through product differentiation—odds quality, payout speed, market breadth, and in-game offerings—rather than through sign-up bonuses alone. The current weekend may be a high-water mark for promotional generosity; the next phase of the industry's development will be defined by what happens after the bonus is credited and the customer decides whether to stay.
This publication's sports desk monitors legal sports betting market developments, including promotional strategy and regulatory updates, on an ongoing basis.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/CBSSportsbook/2847
- https://t.me/CBSSportsbook/2846