Skip to content

Skill-cash games in New York: full app guide

All major skill-cash apps accept New York residents. Here's the full breakdown.

All apps available
All 6 major skill-cash apps accept New York residents

Solitaire Smash, Solitaire Cash, Blackout Bingo, Bingo Cash, Solitaire Cube, and Dominoes Gold all accept deposits and pay real cashouts to New York residents. New York's skill-vs-chance gaming framework permits skill-based contests for cash prizes under the predominance test.

App-by-app eligibility in New York

AppTypeOperatorNew York statusReview
Solitaire SmashSkill-cash · solitaireSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)AvailableRead →
Solitaire CashSkill-cash · solitairePapaya GamingAvailableRead →
Blackout BingoSkill-cash · bingoSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)AvailableRead →
Bingo CashSkill-cash · bingoPapaya GamingAvailableRead →
Solitaire CubeSkill-cash · solitaireSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)AvailableRead →
Dominoes GoldSkill-cash · dominoesSkillz Inc. (NYSE: SKLZ)AvailableRead →

What this means for New York residents

New York is one of the majority of US states that permit paid skill-cash tournaments. The legal framework is the predominance test — outcomes of skill-cash games (speed scoring, accurate play, strategic decisions) are determined predominantly by player skill rather than by chance. Under New York law, that distinguishes skill-cash games from gambling.

New York is in the Northeast — a region with a relatively higher concentration of restricted-state populations due to historical gambling-law conservatism. Your time zone is Eastern — which affects matchmaking pool density. Skill-cash matchmaking pools are typically deepest during weekday evenings (6–10 PM local) and weekend afternoons. If you're a competitive player, off-peak hours (early morning, late night) often pair you with weaker opponents.

The same general advice applies to New York residents as to any other state: practice in the free mode before depositing, start with the $1 bracket, set a hard stop-loss, and cash out frequently. See our strategy guide for the full playbook.

Recommended apps for New York residents

Pick the app that matches your game preference and risk tolerance. All six work in New York.

New York skill-cash games: frequently asked

Are skill-cash games legal in New York?
Yes. All six major US skill-cash apps — Solitaire Smash, Solitaire Cash, Blackout Bingo, Bingo Cash, Solitaire Cube, and Dominoes Gold — accept deposits from New York residents. New York permits skill-based contests for cash prizes under the predominance test (skill predominates over chance), which is the legal foundation for the entire skill-cash category.
What is the best skill-cash game for New York residents?
For beginners and fast cashouts: Solitaire Cash or Bingo Cash (both Papaya Gaming, 1–2 business day PayPal). For higher prize ceilings: Solitaire Smash or Blackout Bingo (both Skillz Inc., NYSE-listed). For dominoes players specifically: Dominoes Gold. Pick based on which game you'd naturally enjoy playing — your skill at the game matters more than the platform choice.
Do you have to deposit money to play in New York?
No. Every skill-cash app on this page is free to download and includes a free practice mode plus a free daily tournament with small real-cash prizes. New York residents can play these for free indefinitely. Paid tournaments (where the real prize pools live) require a deposit of $5 or more.
Can New York residents really win money playing these games?
Yes — but with the same realistic expectations as anywhere else. Skilled players in New York can net $20–$80 a month in the lower brackets. Top-tier players hit higher ceilings. Casual players typically break even or lose money. Skill-cash games are a learnable competitive skill, not passive income.
Are there any restrictions on New York skill-cash play?
No state-level restrictions on the apps we cover for New York residents as of May 2026. State laws can change. Each app's in-app eligibility check is the authoritative source — verify before depositing. Restrictions on related categories (online gambling, sports betting, real-money poker) vary in New York but don't affect skill-cash tournament play.

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.