Aristocrat has released its sustainability report for FY25.
For the 12-month period ended 30 September 2025, Aristocrat noted it made AU$6.3bn (US$4.13bn) during this period. Of this, 63% came from its Gaming segment, 29% from its Product Madness social casino segment and 8% came from its real money gaming segment, Aristocrat Interactive. It currently employs over 7,400 people across 25 locations, including Australia, New Zealand, London, Macau and Las Vegas.
Aristocrat aimed to execute its sustainability strategy through several means. This included good governance and responsible business, encouraging safer gambling, sustainable, climate-conscious business practices and community development.
Highlights from the report include Aristocrat's expansion of its Flexi Play electronic gaming machines to 11,000 in New South Wales. This comes following efforts by Liquor & Gaming NSW to improve responsible gaming in the area, including compliance check operations established in late September 2024.
Elsewhere, Aristocrat has established research partnerships with the University of Nevada, improved its player education campaign videos, switched tp renewable electricity and more. It has refurbished over 6,400 of its machines, repairing almost 70,000 parts, and has assessed over 700 other suppliers for their efforts in sustainability.
It also proved to have developed its internal business community, scoring an employee net promoter score of 53 - 14 above the industry benchmark.
On the results, Aristocrat CEO & Managing Director Trevor Croker said: "In FY25, we made meaningful progress across our sustainability pillars and continued aligning our approach with emerging global disclosure standards...
"Looking ahead, we remain focused on building the capabilities and processes required to meet applicable mandatory sustainability reporting requirements globally... I am proud of the progress we have made and confident that our values and strategy position Aristocrat to actively contribute to building a more sustainable future."
In July and August 2024, Liquor & Gaming NSW inspectors visited 528 hotels and clubs in the area to assess compliance