Running a sweepstakes, contest, or instant win promotion that's open to Idaho residents? This guide covers every state-specific requirement you need to know — registration obligations, bonding, raffle restrictions, alcohol prize rules, and the key statutes that govern promotions in ID. Federal requirements (FTC rules, no-purchase-necessary, tax reporting) apply in every state — this page focuses on what's unique to Idaho.

Registration Requirements

Idaho does not require sweepstakes registration or bonding. Idaho does not require sweepstakes registration or bonding. Your promotion must comply with federal requirements (FTC rules, no-purchase-necessary, postal lottery statutes) and ID's general consumer protection laws.

Key Statutes

The following Idaho statutes are relevant to sweepstakes and promotional compliance:

  • Idaho Code § 18-3801 et seq. (gambling)

Regulatory body: Idaho Attorney General

Sweepstakes Rules in Idaho

Legal with standard NPN compliance.

Contest Rules

Skill-based contests are permitted without additional state requirements.

Instant Win Rules

Instant win games are legal with standard free entry requirements.

Raffle & Lottery Rules

Raffles: Raffles are restricted to qualified charitable and nonprofit organizations.

Lotteries: State-run via Idaho Lottery. Private lotteries are illegal.

Commercial raffles are illegal in Idaho

Raffles — where participants pay for a ticket and winners are drawn at random — are restricted to qualified nonprofit organizations. Brands cannot run commercial raffles. If your promotion involves purchasing a ticket for a chance to win, restructure it as a sweepstakes (free entry required) or a contest (skill-based judging).

Alcohol Prize Rules

Idaho permits DTC wine shipments with a wine direct shipper permit. Spirits DTC is restricted.

Key Takeaways for Idaho

Idaho Compliance Checklist

  • Comply with all federal requirements (FTC, NPN, postal lottery statutes)
  • Draft complete official rules with all required disclosures
  • Ensure AMOE provides equal odds of winning
  • Collect W-9 for prizes valued at $2,000+
  • Include 'void where prohibited' clause in official rules
  • Check Idaho's consumer protection laws for disclosure requirements

Related Resources

For the complete legal framework that applies to all U.S. sweepstakes, see our pillar guides:

Revup Revup

Revup tracks state-by-state compliance requirements and flags registration obligations based on your prize value and eligible states.

Try it free