January 2026 Casino Revenue $91.9M, Sports Wagering $76.1M
Summary
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission reported January 2026 Gross Gaming Revenue of approximately $91.9 million from three casino licensees (Plainridge Park Casino, MGM Springfield, Encore Boston Harbor) and approximately $76.1 million in taxable sports wagering revenue from seven mobile/online and three in-person sports wagering operators. Cumulative casino tax collections since opening total approximately $2.356 billion; cumulative sports wagering tax collections since 2023 total approximately $425.18 million.
What changed
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission released January 2026 monthly revenue figures for casino and sports wagering operations. Casino revenue of $91.9 million from three licensed facilities reflects standard GGR taxation at rates of 49% (Category 2 slots facility) and 25% (Category 1 resort-casinos), with proceeds distributed to Local Aid, Race Horse Development Fund, and various state funds. Sports wagering revenue of $76.1 million is taxed at 15% for retail operators and 20% for mobile/online operators, with allocations to General Fund (45%), Workforce Investment Trust (17.5%), Gaming Local Aid (27.5%), Youth Development and Achievement (1%), and Public Health Trust (9%).
Affected gaming licensees (three casino operators, ten sports wagering operators including BetMGM, Caesars, DraftKings, FanDuel, and others) should monitor monthly reporting requirements. Operators experiencing negative adjusted gross sports wagering receipts may carry over losses to subsequent monthly tax filings per the Sports Wagering Law. This is a routine revenue reporting release with no new compliance obligations or regulatory changes.
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
For Immediate Release Media Contact: March 20, 2026 Thomas Mills (MGC) 617-979-8408 Press release: 26-007
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission Releases January 2026 Casino and Sports Wagering Revenue
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission reported today that the month of January 2026 at Plainridge Park Casino (PPC), MGM Springfield (MGM), and Encore Boston Harbor (EBH) generated approximately $91.9 million in Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR). Additionally, approximately $76.1 million in taxable sports wagering revenue (TSWR) was generated across the seven mobile/online sports wagering licensees and the three in-person licensees for the month of January. Gross Gaming Revenue (casino gaming) PPC, a category 2 slots facility, is taxed on 49% of GGR. Of that total taxed amount, 82% is paid to Local Aid and 18% is allotted to the Race Horse Development Fund. MGM Springfield and Encore Boston Harbor, category 1 resort-casinos, are taxed on 25% of GGR; those monies are allocated to several specific state funds as determined by the gaming statute. Since each gaming facility opened, the Commonwealth has collected approximately $2.356 billion in total taxes and assessments from the casino operations of PPC, MGM, and Encore. View comprehensive revenue reports for each gaming licensee here.
Sports Wagering Revenue EBH, MGM, and PPC are licensed as Category 1 Sports Wagering Operators, which allows them to operate a retail sportsbook at their respective property. Category 1 operators are taxed on 15% of TSWR. Bally Bet, BetMGM, Caesars Sportsbook, DraftKings, ESPNBet, Fanatics Betting & Gaming, and FanDuel are licensed as Category 3 Sports Wagering Operators, which allows them to operate a mobile or online sportsbook. Category 3 Sports Wagering Operators are taxed on 20% of TWSR. Of the total taxed amount for all operators, 45% is allotted to the General Fund, 17.5% to the Workforce Investment Trust Fund, 27.5% to the Gaming Local Aid Fund, 1% to the Youth Development and Achievement Fund, and 9% to the Public Health Trust Fund. To date, the Commonwealth has collected approximately $425.18 million in total taxes and assessments from licensed operators' sports wagering operations since sports wagering began in person on January 31, 2023, and online on March 10, 2023.
When an operator's adjusted gross sports wagering receipts for a month is a negative number because the winnings paid to wagerers and excise taxes paid pursuant to federal law exceed the operator's total gross
receipts from sports wagering, the Sports Wagering Law allows the operator to carry over the negative amount in tax liability to returns filed for subsequent months. View comprehensive revenue reports for each sports wagering operator here.
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