The Punxsutawney Spirit

US casinos have their best July ever, winning nearly $5.4B from gamblers

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Commercial casinos in the U.S. had their best July ever this year, winning nearly $5.4 billion from gamblers, according to figures released Thursday by a national gambling industry group.

The American Gaming Associatio­n said the casinos’ winnings were up nearly 6% from July 2022.

The associatio­n also said the casinos remain on pace to have their best year ever in 2023, with winnings from in-person casino games, sports betting and internet gambling at nearly $38 billion over the first seven months of this year, 11% ahead of what they won during the same period in 2022.

The associatio­n, the national trade group for the gambling industry, also revealed that revenue from traditiona­l in-person casino games in July was $4.4 billion, a new monthly record. It said those figures were aided by seasonal travel trends and the addition of several new physical casino properties around the country, including in Illinois, Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia.

Sports betting generated nearly $498 million in revenue in July, up over 28% from a year ago. Internet gambling in Connecticu­t, Delaware, Michigan, New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia generated another $481.5 million, up nearly 23% from a year ago.

The group said 21 of 31 commercial gambling states that were operationa­l a year ago and have complete data available posted year-over-year revenue growth in July.

Only five states reported their casinos won less over the first seven months of this year than they did a year earlier: Florida (-0.8%); Indiana (-0.5%); Iowa (-0.1%); Louisiana (-0.1%), and Mississipp­i (-3.8%).

The figures do not include money won at tribal-run casinos, which report their revenue separately.

Combined revenue from online sports betting and internet gambling increased 25.2 percent year-over-year in July. The rate of revenue growth from land-based casinos, which includes money won from gamblers at slot machines, table games and retail sports betting, remained steady at 2.5% in both June and July. It had been flat for the three months before then.

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