TLDR Pennsylvania gaming revenue reached $602.4 million in March 2026, up 4.85% from March 2025, generating $259.2 million in state tax revenue. iGaming revenue climbed 6.9% to $254.7 million, with online slots alone up 12.2% to $201.4 million. Sports betting revenue surged 77.1% to $47.9 million despite total handle falling 13.3% to $730.9 million. Retail slot machines and table games both declined, dropping 2.8% and 3.9% respectively. Hollywood Casino at Penn National led with $116.3 million in revenue, up 8.5% year-over-year.
Pennsylvania’s gaming industry brought in $602.4 million in total revenue during March 2026. That marked a 4.85% increase compared to the same month last year, according to the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board.
The state collected $259.2 million in taxes from all forms of regulated gaming. The figures covered slot machines, table games, iGaming, sports betting, video gaming terminals, and fantasy contests.
The results showed a clear shift in how people are choosing to gamble. Online casino play and sports wagering carried the growth, while traditional retail gaming pulled back.
iGaming Continues to Gain Ground Over Retail Casinos
Retail casinos across the state posted mixed numbers. Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course led all properties with $116.3 million in adjusted gross revenue, an 8.5% jump from last year.
Valley Forge Casino Resort also had a strong month, rising 14.6% to $98.8 million. Caesars Virginia reported $34.2 million in adjusted gross revenue.
Not all properties fared as well. Parx Casino dipped slightly to $57.8 million. Wind Creek Bethlehem fell 9.2% to $45.9 million.
Statewide retail slot revenue came in at $216.2 million, down 2.8% from March 2025. Retail table games dropped 3.9% to $78.7 million.
Online casinos told a different story. iGaming slots climbed 12.2% to $201.4 million.
Total iGaming revenue reached $254.7 million, a 6.9% increase