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Pennsylvania Casinos Cool in April, But iGaming Continues Positive Run

Pennsylvania casinos cooled off in April in terms of the brick-and-mortar play following the state’s all-time best revenue month set in March.

Hollywood Casino York. Pennsylvania casinos experienced a dip in their brick-and-mortar play during April 2023, but online gaming continued to expand. Total revenue last month was $476.7 million. (Image: York Dispatch)

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board (PGCB) today announced the April revenue results for the state’s 17 retail casinos, iGaming websites, and retail and online sportsbooks.

Land-based casinos won about $213 million from slot machines and another $84.3 million on table games for a combined haul of approximately $297.3 million. That’s a nearly 4% year-over-year reduction. Slot income fell 2.2% while felt win tumbled almost 8%. April’s brick-and-mortar casino revenue was about 4.5% below March when the state’s casinos won $311.2 million.

Pennsylvania’s gaming industry made up for the in-person revenue losses elsewhere, specifically iGaming and sports betting.

iGaming, Oddsmakers Continue Growth

As was the case last month in New Jersey where Atlantic City’s nine casinos experienced reduced brick-and-mortar win but those losses were made up online, Pennsylvania’s internet casinos and mobile sportsbooks continued to widen their business operations in April 2023. And the online action more than covered the ground losses.

Pennsylvania iGaming revenue from interactive slots surged 25% to more than $95.6 million, while online table win rose 16% to nearly $38.9 million. Online poker rake added $2.7 million for a combined iGaming win of about $137.2 million. In April 2022, iGaming revenue was $113.1 million.

Oddsmakers also fared well in April, as sportsbooks won $37 million of the $572.2 million wagered. The $37 million hold represents a 10% year-over-year gain.

Pennsylvania’s video gaming terminal locations reported gross revenue of $3.5 million — a nearly 6% decline from a year ago. Daily fantasy sports platforms added $1.5 million in contest fees — a 9% year-over-year decline.

In all, Pennsylvania’s gaming industry won more than $476.7 million in April. That’s 3.2% better than April 2022.

April 2023 marked the state’s eighth straight month where revenue exceeded $420 million.

State Industry Expanding

Pennsylvania last year became the nation’s second-richest gaming state behind only Nevada. The state’s gaming interests edged New Jersey by just $28,700, as Keystone gross gaming revenue (GGR) totaled $5,211,303,191 to the Garden State’s $5,211,274,456.

It was only a handful of years ago that Pennsylvania was a much smaller gaming state than Nevada and New Jersey. But that changed in 2017 when the Republican-controlled legislature and then-Gov. Tom Wolf (D) turned to gaming to bridge a budget gap instead of increasing taxes.

The state’s 2017 gaming expansion that Wolf signed authorized mini-casinos, sports betting, iGaming, and VLTs at certain truck stops.

The more than $5.2 billion won from gamblers last year in Pennsylvania represents an increase of 61.5% from 2017 when the state’s casinos won $3.2 billion.

Through the first four months of the year, Pennsylvania’s gaming industry continues its upwards trajectory. January through April gaming income totaled more than $1.91 billion — over $300 million more than where the industry stood at this time last year.

The post Pennsylvania Casinos Cool in April, But iGaming Continues Positive Run appeared first on Casino.org.

 

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