Las Vegas Sun

April 16, 2024

Nevada casinos take in record $1.23B in winnings in May

Mirage Reopens

Steve Marcus

Gamblers place bets on roulette during the reopening of the Mirage Thursday, Aug. 27, 2020.

Updated Wednesday, June 30, 2021 | 5:48 p.m.

Nevada's tourism and gambling industry has come roaring back after the pandemic shuttered casinos and kept tourists away last year, with casinos setting a record in May by winning $1.23 billion.

It's the highest single-month win in the state's history, blowing past a $1.165 billion record set in October 2007.

The record win came before tourist-reliant Nevada on June 1 lifted virtually all restrictions on crowds and business capacity statewide. The casino's take has topped $1 billion for three months in a row. Even before the restrictions lifted in June, tourists were again flocking to Las Vegas casinos, and most casino resorts were allowed to return to 100% capacity.

In May, 2.9 million people visited Las Vegas, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, an increase of nearly 12% from April. Hotel rooms were about 71% occupied on average over the month, with weekend occupancy climbing to 88%.

The visitation rates and hotel occupancy rates still have a way to go to match levels set in the same period in 2019.

Comparisons to last year weren't relevant because casinos were closed statewide from mid-March to early June 2020 to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.

Michael Lawton, a senior analyst with the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said the May casino win was driven by a record revenues for slot machines on the Las Vegas Strip at $358.3 million and robust baccarat revenues.

Casinos on the famed Las Vegas Strip won $655.5 million last month, up nearly 27% percent from the same month in 2019.

Statewide, operators of sports books took in $477.4 million in bets, up 50% from May 2019 and won $27.1 million, up 140% from from the same month two years ago. Both were records for the month of May, Lawton said.

The May gambling revenues generated $107 million in tax revenue for the state of Nevada. Casino taxes are second only to sales tax as a percentage of Nevada's annual budget. The state has no personal income tax.