NJ online casino revenue dipped month-over-month, with operators reporting a combined $134.6 million, just off from March’s all-time high of $138 million. NJ online casino revenue dipped month-over-month, with operators reporting a combined $134.6 million, just off from March’s all-time high of $138 million.
Key Takeaways
  • For the 14th straight month, the New Jersey online poker market dipped, according to the latest data from the NJ Division of Gaming Enforcement (NJDGE).
  • In April, the three active licensees generated $2.25 million in revenue, down 6.3% from the same month a year ago.
  • NJ online casino revenue dipped month-over-month, with operators reporting a combined $134.6 million, just off from March’s all-time high of $138 million.

For the 14th straight month, the New Jersey online poker market dipped, according to the latest data from the NJ Division of Gaming Enforcement (NJDGE), available on PRO’s Data platform. In April, the three active licensees generated $2.25 million in revenue, down 6.3% from the same month a year ago.

Borgata, which hosts the online poker rooms of Borgata, BetMGM, and partypoker, remains top of the market for the third month in a row, with $805k in revenue, just exceeding that of second-place Caesars (WSOP, 888poker) at $789k. However, the gap between the two is the closest it has been for many months. Resorts (PokerStars) remains at the bottom of the pack, reporting $661k in revenue.

Still, year-over-year the Borgata trio and PokerStars will be happy with last month, each seeing single percentage point growth. WSOP, on the other hand, fell 23%.

NJ online casino revenue dipped month-over-month, with operators reporting a combined $134.6 million, just off from March’s all-time high of $138 million. Still, it represents annual growth of 25%, up on last month’s 23%.

Things remain close among PRO’s dominant Top Three. Online casinos on the Borgata license (which includes BetMGM, Pala, and others) remained on top, with $39 million in revenue, just staying in front of Golden Nugget (Betfair, Sugarhouse) at $38 million.

Resorts (DraftKings, PokerStars) is third at $28 million, slipping away from the front runners. It has been on something of a fall since December’s high of $32 million.