In terms of money won from in-person gamblers, Borgata won $60.5 million, up 11.6% from a year earlier Hard Rock won $43.3 million, down 2.8% Ocean won nearly $34.9 million, up 17.6% Caesars won $21.4 million, up 11.4% Tropicana won just over $21 million, down nearly 2% Harrah’s won nearly $21 million, up 3.8% Resorts won $15.2 million, up nearly 11% Bally’s won $12.4 million, down 8.2% and Golden Nugget won $11.8 million, down 6%. Resorts Digital, the casino’s online arm, won nearly $61 million, up nearly 87%. Golden Nugget won $53.7 million, up 11% Hard Rock won $51.2 million, down 1.7% Ocean won nearly $40 million, up nearly 24% Tropicana won $29.5 million, down 6.7% Caesars won $21.6 million, up 10% Harrah’s won nearly $21 million, up 3.4% Bally’s won $19.4 million, up 10% and Resorts won $15.3 million, up nearly 11%. When internet and sports betting money is included, the market-leading Borgata won nearly $105 million in June, up 5.3% from a year earlier. The Casino Association of New Jersey, the trade group for the Atlantic City casinos, said the numbers show “that the industry continues to be in a rebuilding and recovery phase from where it was three years ago.”
At $931.1 million for the first half of 2023, and $911.5 million in the first half of 2022, they have yet to make up that lost ground. Between 20, the other seven casinos consistently won more than $1 billion from in-person gamblers in the first half of the year.