Game type guide

Live Dealer at Sweepstakes Casinos

Live dealer sections stream a real host running blackjack, roulette, baccarat, or game-show rounds from a studio, with your plays placed through a digital overlay. It is the closest a sweepstakes casino gets to the floor experience — and historically the rarest section in the category.

Streaming studios are costly to license, so live dealer tends to arrive only once a platform has real scale, and several major sweeps brands still operate without one. Where it exists, tables are shared with other players, seats can fill during peak evening hours, and the available stake ranges are set per table.

The practical consequence: if live tables are why you are here, availability is the first filter, not a tiebreaker. Shortlist from the platforms that actually advertise the section, then compare table variety and hours — a live lobby with one blackjack table at US evening peak is a very different product from a studio running roulette, baccarat, and game shows around the clock.

Ratings are our editorial opinion, applied with the same criteria across the site. 18+ (21+ in some jurisdictions).

Independent editorial ratings
Affiliate links disclosed
18+ (21+ in some jurisdictions)
Responsible gaming: 1-800-GAMBLER

Live Dealer Availability by Casino

CasinoLive DealerNotesVisit
Pulsz Casino logo
Pulsz Casino
Excellent
9.2
AdvertisedLive dealer play is highlighted in its advertised library.Visit
Blitzmania logo
Blitzmania
Exceptional
10.0
Limited infoNot specifically advertised at the time of our review.Visit
Stake.us logo
Stake.us
Exceptional
9.6
Limited infoNot specifically advertised at the time of our review.Visit
McLuck Casino logo
McLuck Casino
Excellent
9.0
Limited infoNot specifically advertised at the time of our review.Visit
Wow Vegas logo
Wow Vegas
Very good
8.8
Limited infoNot specifically advertised at the time of our review.Visit

Availability is based on advertised game libraries and our review notes at the time of review — libraries change constantly, so always confirm in the casino's own lobby before signing up.

What to look for in a live dealer lobby

  • Whether the casino advertises live dealer at all — many sweepstakes platforms simply do not have it
  • Table variety beyond blackjack: roulette, baccarat, and game-show formats
  • Published table hours and seat limits in the game info panels
  • Whether Sweeps Coins play is supported at live tables, or the section is Gold Coin only

FAQ

Live Dealer — Frequently Asked Questions

Which sweepstakes casinos have live dealer games?
Fewer than you might expect — live studios are expensive to license, so the section is concentrated among the larger platforms. Rather than name names that can go stale, our table above shows which casinos reference live dealer in their advertised material as of our last review.
How does live dealer work under the sweepstakes model?
The stream is the same kind of studio production real-money casinos use: a human dealer runs the table on camera and your decisions are placed through the digital overlay. The sweeps layer sits on top — sessions run in Gold Coins or Sweeps Coins per the casino's rules, and SC play carries prize eligibility under the operator's terms.
Are live dealer tables always available?
Not necessarily. Unlike RNG games, live tables have real operating constraints: published hours, seat limits, and peak-time demand. Some studios run around the clock while others open for set windows, and a full table means waiting for a seat. The info panel on each table lists its schedule.
Can I play live dealer games with Sweeps Coins?
It varies by platform and sometimes by table. Some casinos support SC play across their live section, others restrict live tables to Gold Coin mode, and playthrough weighting for live play differs too. The casino's terms and the table's own rules panel are the authority.
Is live dealer better than regular RNG table games?
It is a different product, not a strictly better one. Live tables give you a human pace, visible dealing, and a social element; RNG tables deal instantly, never fill up, and usually offer lower minimum stakes. Many players rehearse in RNG mode and save live sessions for when the experience is the point.

The Bottom Line on Live Dealer

Live dealer is the one section where the honest first question is simply "does it exist here?" — and the table above answers that faster than any lobby tour. Once you have the shortlist, judge the section like a product: variety, hours, and stake ranges, in that order.

Temper expectations on minimums. Studio tables cost operators real money per hour, so live minimums usually sit above RNG equivalents — check that the stake range fits your coin balance before settling in, and confirm whether the table you want runs in Sweeps Coins mode at all.

What we mark as advertised reflects each operator's material and our notes at review time; live sections launch, expand, and occasionally disappear without notice, and our ratings are editorial opinion throughout. 18+ (21+ in some jurisdictions). If gambling stops being fun, call 1-800-GAMBLER.