

Detroit Casino Revenue Hits Post-Pandemic High Of $122 Million In March
The Michigan Gaming Control Board reported $122.3 million in adjusted gross casino revenue from its three Detroit casinos for March on Tuesday, the highest monthly total post-pandemic.
The figure does not include the $1.6 million in AGR claimed by its three sportsbooks. The casino gaming revenue was the most accrued by the trio since they collected a combined $127.8 million in December 2019. The previous high in monthly revenue since March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic started, was $120.9 million in March 2022. That was also the only previous instance post-pandemic in which Detroit’s three casinos combined to surpass $120 million.
Revenue was up 3.8% compared to the $117.8 million accumulated in March 2023 and 16.7% higher stacked up against the $104.8 million claimed in February, which had two fewer days of wagering. The state collected $9.9 million in tax revenue for March, lifting the total to just shy of $26 million for the first quarter of 2024. That is $423,994 less than the same period in 2023.
The city of Detroit received $14.5 million worth of tax receipts, and the $38.2 million collected through the first three months of the year is $4.6 million less compared to the first quarter of 2023.
Both MGM Grand and MotorCity Casino had their best individual months in two years. MGM Grand paced the trio with $56.7 million, its highest revenue haul since claiming $56.8 million in April 2022. It was also MGM Grand’s best March since amassing $59.2 million in 2019 as this year’s March revenue was up 4.1% compared to last year.
MotorCity’s year-over-year 7.2% increase in revenue was tops among Motown’s gaming venues, and the $38.4 million in AGR was its most in a month since it posted a $39.3 million total in March 2022. MotorCity has generated $97.1 million in the first quarter of this year, less than $155,000 behind the same period in 2023.
Greektown Casino reported a 1.4% decline against March 2023 to $27.3 million. The PENN Entertainment-owned venue has yet to have a month post-pandemic surpass the $28.6 million reported for February 2020. For the year, Greektown’s revenue of $73.3 million is off 1.2% compared to the first quarter of 2023.
The trio has generated $320.9 million in revenue for the first three months of 2024, down 1.6% to the comparable span last year.
After reporting a small six-figure loss in February, Detroit’s three retail sportsbooks had a solid March. The trio won $1.6 million in gross revenue from $17.2 million handle, good for a 9.3% hold.
Handle was up 23.8% compared to March 2023, aided by the NCAA Tournament hosting the Midwest regionals at Little Caesars Arena. Revenue increased 12.1% as the win rate was nearly one full percentage point lower compared to 12 months prior.
Greektown saw the bulk of the city’s sports betting action — the $9.6 million worth of wagers represented a 48.4% increase from March 2023. The $731,389 won, however, was up only 4.1% from last year as the sportsbook’s overall deficit for 2024 shrank to $175,039.
MotorCity Casino had another solid March as the FanDuel-powered sportsbook had a 13.5% hold in winning $538,988 from close to $4 million wagered. It was the fourth consecutive March the brick-and-mortar venue had a win rate of 12.4% or better.
MGM Grand posted an 8.9% hold while claiming $327,815 in winnings from $3.7 million handle. Though it was the only sportsbook of the three to see a year-over-year decline in wagers accepted, the BetMGM sportsbook had a 15.5% bounce in revenue thanks to the hold being nearly 1.9 percentage points higher.
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