Photo by Kaysha on Unsplash
$3.31 billion is a striking figure, but it only starts to tell the story of how—and where—Louisianans played in 2025. That topline reflects money flowing through multiple channels, from riverboat and land-based casinos to video poker, racetrack slots, fantasy contests, and a record-setting year for sports wagering. Below, I break down the major contributors behind the number, highlight what drove momentum in 2025, and share practical takeaways for everyday players.
When people talk about how much a state “gambled,” they often mix two ideas: revenue (what operators won) and handle (what bettors wagered). For context, Louisiana’s monthly reports show casinos and racinos consistently generating around $180–$215 million in adjusted gross revenue (AGR) through much of 2025, with spikes during peak tourism and sports months. Examples include roughly $209 million in June and about $215 million in August across riverboats, the New Orleans land-based casino, and racetrack slots, illustrating the steady baseline of the year.
In addition, 2025 brought some of the strongest sports-betting months Louisiana has seen, with fall football lifting both handle and operator win. September and October posted standout numbers, supported by high hold and active mobile betting. (RG)
If you’re new to the market landscape and want a concise snapshot of the local scene, this Louisiana online casino overview is a good primer; I often see Gambling Nerd referenced for state-by-state rundowns, and it’s a useful starting point for players comparing options.
Louisiana’s casino core—riverboats, Caesars New Orleans, and racetrack slots—remained the engine. Monthly AGR tallies commonly hovered near $200 million, led by properties in Lake Charles, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans. November still cleared about $183.8 million for casinos alone, a modest year-over-year uptick that underscores how resilient brick-and-mortar play was to close the year.
Mobile sports betting added the accelerant. After a solid summer (July GGR of ~$31.4 million on $226.7 million in handle), the market surged into football season, with October handle around $459 million and GGR near $48 million—among the state’s top months on record.
Two real-world factors mattered in 2025:
Slots remained the everyday favorite, supported by video poker’s ingrained bar-and-truck-stop culture statewide. Table games and high-visibility events (from summer travel peaks to football weekends) created predictable surges. Sportsbooks saw outsized contributions from parlays in the fall, which tend to lift operator hold and, in turn, monthly revenue. The pattern shows up in the late-year jump in sportsbook GGR.
Looking at the latest public annual report (covering FY 2023–24) helps set a baseline: riverboats generated about $1.73 billion that fiscal year, with Caesars New Orleans adding ~$240 million and racetrack slots roughly ~$318 million. That context makes 2025’s steady ~$200 million-per-month casino cadence feel right in line—if not slightly stronger—once you layer on a robust football season for sportsbooks and a full year of video poker and fantasy contests.
Before you chase a big event or a new property opening, think like a pro:
The $3.31 billion reflects a diversified gaming culture, characterized by dependable casino revenue, a statewide affinity for video poker, and a sports-betting market that gains momentum in the fall. Add regional visitors and ongoing property upgrades, and you have a well-rounded picture of why Louisiana’s 2025 total landed where it did—and why the state will be one to watch again this 2026.