DraftKings users can now buy better parlay odds via a new $20 per month subscription service, first reported by .

DraftKings announces they are rolling out a new subscription service for bettors in New York.Max 100% Boost

Called DraftKings Sportsbook+, launched only in New York at this point, the subscription offers “Unlimited ‘Stepped Up’ Boost Tokens” 30 minutes from the time you subscribe that can be applied to parlays and same game parlays. Participants will get a maximum 100% profit boost on winning parlays (11 or more legs).

DraftKings is the first sportsbook to offer a subscription service. According to the service was launched quietly in New York on Dec. 28.

New DraftKings Sportsbook+, launched in New York.High New York Taxes

In a statement, the company said:

The subscription service was designed to offer our customers an enhanced fan experience, creating more excitement and value to our extensive parlay offering.”

As in September, DraftKings CEO Jason Robins said he would be looking at alternate avenues to get around jurisdictions with high sports betting taxes – like New York for example, with a tax rate of 51%.

In August, DraftKings had proposed implementing a tax on winning bets in states with high tax rates but in two weeks abandoned the idea.

Massive Expansion in Popularity of Parlays

No word from DraftKings on a rollout of the subscription offering in other states. In the end, bettors can make longer shot wagers potentially more lucrative. Parlay bets are also a rapidly expanding area of profitability for sportsbooks, thanks in part to aggressive advertising by sportsbooks like DraftKings, FanDuel and BetMGM.

According to Flutter Entertainment, the company that owns FanDuel, over 262 million ‘Same Game’ bets were made globally in the last quarter of 2023 across Flutter’s key brands – almost 75% more than in the same period in 2022.

Uruguay Codere Casino Employee Arrested for Stealing More Than $300K  The 2016 Caesars Bankruptcy Proceedings That Seemingly Would Never End  Biggest Gaming Business Busts of 2016: Who Fell This Year and How Far  Privacy: New Hampshire Powerball Winner Goes to Court to Keep Her $560M Win Secret  VEGAS RESTAURANT ROUNDUP: Au Revoir Aureole, Hello ‘Top Chef’ stars, Vic’s, & Durango Food Hall  Casino Industry Waiting Patiently for Its Trump Meeting  Casinos Could Open at Nebraska Tracks in Less Than a Year After Ballot Initiatives Pass  Suffolk Downs Racetrack Sues Wynn Resorts for $3 Billion Alleging Massachusetts Casino License ‘Fix’  DraftKings Jumps On Improved 2023 Guidance  Russia’s Putin and Japan’s PM Abe Meet, as Sochi Casino Readies to Welcome Gamblers After New Year