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Skill-cash games in Arizona: which apps work

Arizona currently restricts paid skill-cash tournaments. Here's what works for Arizona residents instead.

Restricted state
Paid tournaments do not work for Arizona residents

None of the major US skill-cash games — Solitaire Smash, Solitaire Cash, Blackout Bingo, Bingo Cash, Solitaire Cube, or Dominoes Gold — allow real-money deposits from Arizona addresses. Free practice modes still work and pay small amounts. For real earnings without a deposit, see the reward-app alternatives below.

App-by-app eligibility in Arizona

AppTypeOperatorArizona statusReview
Solitaire SmashSkill-cash · solitaireSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)BlockedRead →
Solitaire CashSkill-cash · solitairePapaya GamingBlockedRead →
Blackout BingoSkill-cash · bingoSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)BlockedRead →
Bingo CashSkill-cash · bingoPapaya GamingBlockedRead →
Solitaire CubeSkill-cash · solitaireSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)BlockedRead →
Dominoes GoldSkill-cash · dominoesSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)BlockedRead →

What this means for Arizona residents

Arizona is one of 13 US states that currently restricts paid skill-cash tournaments. Arizona's gambling statutes have been interpreted by app developers to restrict paid skill-cash tournaments. Arizona is located in the West — where most states permit paid skill-cash tournaments with the notable exception of Montana and Arizona, and the restriction stems from state-level gambling-law interpretation rather than from any individual app's policy choice.

The practical effect: a Arizona billing address blocks you from entering any paid tournament on the six major skill-cash apps. The apps know this — their in-app deposit screen will display your state as ineligible before you can fund an account. Some apps refuse the install entirely; others allow practice-mode play with the paid-tournament UI grayed out.

The good news: practice modes are still useful. They pay cents, not dollars, but they're free and they break no Arizona law. If skill-cash legal status changes in Arizona in the future, your practice scores transfer to paid play.

For real earnings today, Arizona residents should look at reward apps — see below.

What Arizona residents can play instead

The reward apps below pay real money for playing games, with no deposit required. They work in all 50 states including Arizona.

Arizona skill-cash games: frequently asked

Are skill-cash games legal in Arizona?
Arizona currently restricts paid skill-cash tournaments. All of the major US skill-cash apps — Solitaire Smash, Solitaire Cash, Blackout Bingo, Bingo Cash, Solitaire Cube, and Dominoes Gold — block real-money deposits from Arizona residents based on their interpretation of Arizona state law. Free practice modes and free daily tournaments still work in Arizona and pay small amounts of real cash.
Can Arizona residents earn money from games at all?
Yes — reward apps that don't require deposits work everywhere. Mistplay (Android) and KashKick (iOS + Android) pay you to discover new games. No deposit, no losing money, available in all 50 states including Arizona. Realistic earnings: $10–$60/month for active users.
What about the free practice modes of skill-cash apps in Arizona?
Free practice modes and free daily tournaments on Solitaire Smash, Bingo Cash, and the other skill-cash apps work in Arizona. They pay small real-cash amounts (cents to a couple of dollars) and don't require any deposit. They break no Arizona law.
Will Arizona ever change its skill-cash rules?
State laws change. Arizona's current restriction is based on state-level skill-vs-chance jurisprudence interpreted by app developers — both the law and the interpretation can shift. The authoritative source is each app's in-app eligibility check at the time you try to deposit. We update this page when restrictions change.
What if I'm a Arizona resident traveling to another state?
Most skill-cash apps verify your billing address and tax residence, not your physical location during play. A Arizona billing address typically means the apps will not allow paid tournaments regardless of where you're physically playing. Check the app's terms; some apps' restrictions are stricter than others.

State eligibility shown here reflects the publicly available status of US skill-cash apps as of May 2026, based on the apps' own in-app eligibility checks and state-level skill-vs-chance jurisprudence. State laws change; individual apps occasionally shift policies. The deposit screen inside each app is the final authority. This page is informational and is not legal advice.