The Missouri Gaming Commission has reported the state’s total casino activity for March 2026, as revenue generated by commercial gaming establishments decreased 2% for a total of $175.1m.
Revenue produced by electronic gaming devices (EGDs) remained stagnant year-over-year at $153.2m, while table game revenue in Missouri decreased 11% to just over $21.9m. Ameristar St. Charles drove the most EGD revenue with $21.7m but fell 1%, also producing the most table game revenue despite decreasing 16% to $3.9m.
The St. Charles property witnessed a total revenue decrease of 3% to $25.6m, followed closely by River City Casino which reported a 1% increase in revenue to $24.8m.
Hollywood Casino St. Louis accounted for nearly $23.2m of Missouri’s total casino revenue for March 2026 and increased 3%, while Ameristar Kansas City generated $17m of revenue but fell 10%.
Missouri Casino Revenue - March
How Missouri casino revenue has altered since March 2021
Harrah’s Kansas City managed to account for $16m of revenue during the monthly period, representing an increase of 5%. Horseshoe St. Louis and Argosy Casino generated March 2026 revenues of $14.9m and $14.4m, respectively, but the figures equate to no change year-over-year and a decrease of 7%.
Bally’s Kansas City generated $11.1m of casino revenue for March 2026, witnessing a fall of 9% from the prior year period.
Isle of Capri Boonville managed to report the highest increase in revenue of any Missouri gaming establishment during March 2026, rising 6% for a total of $8.5m.
Century Caruthersville and Century Cape produced $5.6m and $6.6m of casino revenue during March 2026, respectively, equating to increases of 2% and 4%. Mark Twain Casino witnessed a revenue decrease of 6% to $3.1m, while St. Jo Frontier produced $4.4m of revenue and fell 1%.
In December 2025, Global Gaming Insider broke down the impact Missouri’s regulated sports betting launch would have on neighboring states, including Iowa, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Nebraska and Kansas.
Operators such as FanDuel and Caesars Entertainment launched mobile and in-person sports wagering in Missouri, following the state's opening of its regulated betting market on December 1, 2025