Oregon has 8 verified casino locations in our directory — from major resort-casinos to tribal properties and card rooms. Browse the map, compare options, and find players clubs near you.
Major casino properties in Oregon — verified locations, casino type, and players club details.
Click any city to open its full casino directory — every property with map, addresses, and visitor details.
Portland has 3 verified casino properties in our directory — including 3 resort casinos. Every listing includes a verified address, contact details, and players club information.
Players clubs at Portland properties are free to join at the desk on arrival. Sign up before your first session — points are not retroactive. Typical new-member benefits include free-play credits, dining discounts, and hotel rates at resort properties.
Coos Bay has 2 verified casino properties in our directory — including 2 resort casinos. Every listing includes a verified address, contact details, and players club information.
Players clubs at Coos Bay properties are free to join at the desk on arrival. Sign up before your first session — points are not retroactive. Typical new-member benefits include free-play credits, dining discounts, and hotel rates at resort properties.
Lincoln City has 1 verified casino property in our directory — including 1 resort casino. Every listing includes a verified address, contact details, and players club information.
Players clubs at Lincoln City properties are free to join at the desk on arrival. Sign up before your first session — points are not retroactive. Typical new-member benefits include free-play credits, dining discounts, and hotel rates at resort properties.
Wilsonville has 1 verified casino property in our directory — including 1 resort casino. Every listing includes a verified address, contact details, and players club information.
Players clubs at Wilsonville properties are free to join at the desk on arrival. Sign up before your first session — points are not retroactive. Typical new-member benefits include free-play credits, dining discounts, and hotel rates at resort properties.
Oregon's casino industry is regulated by the state gaming commission. All commercial casino operators hold a valid state gaming license. Tribal casinos operate under federal IGRA (1988) compacts negotiated with the state. The legal minimum gambling age is 21 at most properties.
Oregon has a mix of commercial and tribal casino properties. Commercial casinos are privately owned and regulated by the state. Tribal casinos are operated by federally recognized Native American tribes under their own tribal gaming commission in addition to the federal NIGC. Both types are included in this directory.
Online casino gambling is not currently licensed in Oregon. The seven states that currently permit licensed online casino gambling are: New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Michigan, West Virginia, Delaware, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
Most casino properties in Oregon offer a free loyalty program. Joining is free and takes approximately 5 minutes at the players club desk. Sign up before you play — points are not retroactive. Benefits typically include free-play credits, dining discounts, and hotel rates at resort properties.
Oregon is an exclusively tribal gaming state. Every casino operating within its borders runs under a compact between a federally recognized Native American tribe and the State of Oregon, overseen by the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) and the Oregon State Police. There are no commercial casinos, no commercial card rooms offering casino-style games, and no racinos. All casino-style gaming — slot machines, blackjack, craps, roulette, poker — occurs on tribal trust land, and all net gaming revenue flows back to tribal governments supporting housing, health care, education, and cultural preservation programs.
Oregon’s tribal gaming era began after the 1988 Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) authorized Class II and Class III gaming on tribal land. The state signed its first gaming compact with the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde in 1995, clearing the way for Spirit Mountain Casino to open that same year. Since then, nine federally recognized Oregon tribes have negotiated compacts, and the state now has approximately ten operating casino facilities spread from the coast to the high desert. The compacts are permanent — they carry no expiration date — but remain subject to renegotiation. The Oregon State Police, rather than a dedicated gaming control board, serves as the state’s primary oversight authority, making Oregon distinctive among gaming states.
Online casino gambling is not legal in Oregon as of 2026. No tribe holds an authorized iGaming license in the state, and the Oregon Legislature has not passed legislation enabling real-money online casino gaming. Sports wagering through the Oregon Lottery’s Scoreboard app has been available since 2019, but that program is distinct from casino-style online gambling and does not involve tribal operators.
Spirit Mountain Casino in Grand Ronde, operated by the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, is Oregon’s flagship casino and the most visited gaming property in the state. Located on Oregon Route 18 about 65 miles southwest of Portland — roughly 75 minutes by car — the property has served Portland-area gamblers since it opened in 1995.
The casino floor runs close to 90,000 square feet and houses approximately 1,600 slot machines and electronic games, along with multiple table games including blackjack, craps, roulette, mini-baccarat, and three-card poker. A dedicated poker room runs cash games and periodic tournaments. The complex includes a 100-room hotel, full-service dining and casual outlets, a large entertainment venue that books national touring acts, an RV park, and a fuel station.
Spirit Mountain’s loyalty program is the Coyote Club. Membership is free and requires a valid government-issued photo ID. The tier structure runs Member, Sapphire, Ruby, and Diamond. Points accumulate on every slot dollar played and on rated table game action, redeemable for free slot play, hotel stays, dining credits, and event tickets. Diamond tier members receive dedicated host services and priority invitations to special events.
ilani is located in Ridgefield, Washington — roughly 22 miles north of downtown Portland on I-5 — but it functions as the primary full-scale resort casino for the greater Portland metropolitan area. Operated by the Cowlitz Indian Tribe, ilani opened in April 2017 and quickly became one of the highest-grossing tribal casinos in the Pacific Northwest.
The gaming floor exceeds 100,000 square feet with more than 2,500 slot machines and approximately 75 table game positions covering blackjack, craps, roulette, baccarat, and specialty games. A separate poker room hosts daily cash games and weekly tournaments. The resort includes a 15-story hotel tower with over 300 rooms, seven restaurant concepts ranging from a food hall to a fine dining steakhouse, a full-service spa, retail outlets, and an event center that draws major touring concerts and comedy productions.
The Forever Rewards loyalty program operates on a five-tier structure. Members earn Rewards Dollars on gaming, dining, hotel stays, and spa services, redeemable across all resort outlets. Status Points determine tier placement, and upper-tier members (Ascend, Soar) receive priority check-in, dedicated casino host assignments, and exclusive event access.
Chinook Winds in Lincoln City is operated by the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians and sits one block from the Pacific Ocean on the central Oregon coast. The property draws visitors from throughout the Willamette Valley who combine a beach trip with casino play, and it is the dominant gaming resort on the Oregon coast.
The gaming floor features over 1,200 slot machines, table games (blackjack, craps, roulette), a poker room, bingo, and keno. The resort hotel has more than 220 rooms, many with ocean views. Additional amenities include multiple dining outlets, a full convention center, and headline entertainment in the showroom. The Winners Circle rewards program earns points on slots, table games, bingo, and keno, with redemption available for free play and resort amenities.
The Coquille Indian Tribe’s casino in North Bend operated for roughly 30 years as The Mill Casino Hotel & RV Park before rebranding to Ko-Kwel Casino Resort Coos Bay in 2025. The rebrand reflects the Coquille people’s traditional name for their homeland and aligns with the tribe’s second gaming property in Medford (formerly Cedars at Bear Creek Casino, now Ko-Kwel Casino Resort Medford). The North Bend property sits on the edge of Coos Bay and offers over 200 waterfront hotel rooms, more than 100 RV sites, 700-plus slot machines, multiple table games, and several waterfront dining concepts. Guests can check current details and reservations at kokwelresorts.com.
Located just east of Pendleton on the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Wildhorse Resort & Casino is the largest casino east of the Cascades. The property features a substantial gaming floor with hundreds of slot machines and full table game offerings, a hotel, a golf course, an RV resort, and the adjacent Tamastslikt Cultural Institute — one of the Pacific Northwest’s most respected Native American heritage museums. The Club Wild loyalty program earns players points redeemable for free play, hotel stays, and dining at the resort’s restaurant outlets.
Seven Feathers, operated by the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians, sits directly off Interstate 5 at the Canyonville exit in Douglas County, making it a natural stop for travelers between Portland and the California border. The full-service resort includes a casino with slot machines and table games, a hotel, multiple restaurants, an RV park, and a truck plaza. The convenience of the I-5 location makes Seven Feathers the most accessible Oregon tribal casino for road-trip gamblers traveling the north-south corridor.
Three Rivers Casino Resort, operated by the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians, runs two locations: a full resort in Florence on the central coast (with hotel and golf course) and a smaller venue in Coos Bay. The Florence property at 5647 Hwy 126 can be reached by phone at (541) 997-7529.
Indian Head Casino in Warm Springs is operated by the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs on the eastern slope of the Cascades, approximately 90 miles southeast of Portland. The property sits on US 26, convenient for travelers crossing the mountains. Kla-Mo-Ya Casino in Chiloquin is operated by the Klamath Tribes and serves the Klamath Basin market north of Klamath Falls. Ko-Kwel Casino Resort Medford operates in the Rogue Valley near Medford on South Pacific Highway.
The minimum gambling age at all Oregon tribal casinos is 21. Smoking policies vary by property; most have designated smoking sections or areas away from the main floor. The majority of Oregon tribal casinos are open 24 hours daily, seven days a week.
Oregon’s tribal casinos are spread across a geographically large and varied state. From Portland, Spirit Mountain (65 miles southwest on OR-18) is the closest major full-service casino. Chinook Winds on the coast is roughly 90 miles via US-20 or OR-18. Wildhorse in Pendleton is approximately 220 miles east on I-84. Seven Feathers is about 210 miles south on I-5. Travelers should plan drive times carefully, particularly those crossing mountain passes during winter months when chain controls may be in effect.
Players clubs at every Oregon tribal casino are free to join and require a valid government-issued photo ID. Players can sign up on the casino floor at the players club desk or at the main cage. Signing up before gaming begins ensures that all play earns points from the first session.
The minimum gambling age at casino properties in Oregon is 21 at most facilities. Some tribal properties may differ — always check the specific casino policy and bring a valid government-issued photo ID.
Set a budget before you arrive and treat gambling as entertainment, not income. Most casino properties in Oregon offer free players club enrollment — sign up at the desk before you play, as points are not retroactive.
Self-exclusion: Oregon offers a voluntary self-exclusion program that allows individuals to ban themselves from licensed casino properties. Contact the Oregon Council on Problem Gambling (oregongambling.org) for enrollment details.
Problem gambling helpline: 1-877-MY-LIMIT (1-877-695-4648). The National Problem Gambling Helpline is also available at 1-800-522-4700, free and confidential, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Additional resources: Gamblers Anonymous (gamblersanonymous.org) and the National Council on Problem Gambling (ncpgambling.org).