Illinois Casino Revenue Hits $181 Million in April but the Details Are More Complicated

Illinois casinos generated $181 million in April 2026, up 11.3% year-over-year, driven largely by new and recently opened properties.
Illinois’ 17 licensed casinos generated $181 million in gaming revenue during April 2026, up 11.3% from the same month a year earlier. It is a headline that looks healthy. It is also a headline that requires some unpacking, because the growth is not evenly distributed, and what is driving it says something important about where the state’s casino market is heading.
The Numbers Behind It All
Slots accounted for $138.7 million of April’s total, up 13.6% year-over-year. Table games contributed $42.3 million, up a more modest 4.4%. Thirteen of the state’s 17 casinos showed year-over-year revenue increases.
Rivers Casino Des Plaines remains the dominant property in the state by a significant margin. It generated $46.2 million in April, up 5.3%, representing roughly 25% of the statewide total from a single property. The casino is jointly owned by Churchill Downs and Rush Street Gaming, and its scale reflects both the advantages of its location near O’Hare Airport and the institutional investment that has gone into building out its gaming floor over more than a decade.
The other notable figures reveal the geography of the state’s casino expansion. Wind Creek Chicago Southland generated $19.5 million. Hard Rock Casino Rockford posted $13.6 million. Grand Victoria contributed $13.3 million. Hollywood Casino Joliet generated $13 million. Bally’s Chicago came in at $12.1 million. Full House Resorts added $10.5 million.
At the other end of the spectrum, Walker’s Bluff fell 8.2% to $2.9 million, and Harrah’s Joliet dropped 7.2% to $8.7 million. The declines at Harrah’s Joliet, one of the state’s older properties, are consistent with the broader pattern of established casinos being squeezed as newer venues draw customers who were previously theirs.
What Is Actually Driving the Growth
Illinois’ 11.3% year-over-year growth in April is substantially driven by new supply rather than organic market expansion, and that distinction matters for understanding the state’s trajectory.
Wind Creek Chicago Southland, which opened in November 2024, is now in its first full year of operation following the completion of its luxury hotel and spa in April 2025. The property generated $198 million in gaming revenue in its first full year, making it the second-highest earning casino in the state. A property of that scale in its first operating year generates year-over-year comparisons against essentially nothing, inflating the growth rate for the market as a whole.
Fairmount Park, which opened its casino component in April 2025, produced the most striking year-over-year number in the April report: revenue up 365.7% to $2.3 million. That is a mathematical artifact of comparing a full month of operation against the first weeks after opening, not a signal about the casino’s operational trajectory.
Hard Rock Casino Rockford opened its permanent facility in August 2024, replacing a temporary venue. The transition from a temporary to a permanent facility, which typically coincides with a significant expansion in gaming positions and amenities, creates a structural step-up in revenue that appears as year-over-year growth, even if the same customers are simply visiting a better version of the same property.
What Chicago Is About to Do to These Numbers
The more significant story in Illinois casino revenue is not April’s results. It is what the second half of 2026 is going to do to comparisons and competitive dynamics.
Bally’s permanent $1.7 billion casino resort in Chicago’s River West neighborhood is targeting a September 2026 opening. The development covers 30 acres at the former Chicago Tribune printing plant site along the Chicago River. The permanent property will offer approximately 3,200 slots and 150 table games, a 500-room luxury hotel, dining, nightlife, event space, and a riverwalk. It will be by some measures the largest casino in the Midwest.
Bally’s has been operating out of the Medinah Temple as a temporary venue since 2023. The temporary venue generated $12.1 million in April 2026. When the permanent facility opens, the revenue step-up will be substantial, and it will put meaningful competitive pressure on every other property in the Chicago metropolitan area, including Rivers Casino Des Plaines, which currently holds its dominant position partly by default of being the highest-quality large-scale casino within the city’s gravitational pull.
American Place in Waukegan, a second major development that has been operating from a temporary facility since 2023, is targeting a permanent opening in 2027. Illinois is in the middle of a multi-year casino construction wave that will look very different when the last property opens than it does today.
The Harrah’s Joliet Problem
The declines at Harrah’s Joliet and Walker’s Bluff are the numbers most worth watching as the expansion continues. Harrah’s Joliet, down 7.2% in April, is one of the older properties in the state’s portfolio. It sits in a competitive market where it faces pressure from Hollywood Casino Joliet on one side and a state casino landscape that has added multiple newer, better-capitalized properties in recent years.
The pattern of older properties losing share to newer entrants is not unique to Illinois, but it plays out with particular clarity in a state that has added as much new supply as Illinois has in the past three years. The 11.3% statewide growth rate conceals a tale of two markets: new and recently expanded properties posting strong numbers while older properties face an increasingly competitive environment with less capital to reinvest.
When Bally’s permanent facility opens in September, the pressure on mid-tier properties in the Chicago area will intensify further. The state’s aggregate revenue numbers may continue to grow. The distribution of that revenue is almost certainly going to shift.
Colin Lynch is a sports betting, iGaming, and prediction markets journalist covering the intersection of sports, wagering, and regulation across the global gambling industry. Colin Lynch is a veteran gambling industry journalist with more than a decade of experience covering the rapidly evolving sports betting...
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