Colorado Land-Based Casinos Post $105.8 Million in May 2026 Revenue as Regional Markets Show Gains

Thirty-three land-based casinos across Colorado produced $105.8 million in gaming revenue during May 2026, which represents a 6.1 percent increase from the same month one year earlier and marks the strongest year-over-year performance recorded in three years, according to figures compiled from state records. Slots accounted for the bulk of that total at $89.5 million, reflecting a 5 percent rise, while table games contributed $16.3 million after climbing 12.1 percent, and those two segments together illustrate how different product categories performed within the same reporting period.
Slot and Table Game Performance Details
Slots generated $89.5 million, which translated into the majority share of overall revenue and showed steady demand across the properties that operate them, whereas table games reached $16.3 million and posted the larger percentage gain of the two categories. Observers note the 12.1 percent increase in table games occurred alongside the more moderate 5 percent rise in slots, creating a combined result that lifted the statewide total to its highest level since comparable periods three years prior. Data shows both segments contributed measurable growth, yet the stronger movement in table games helped push the overall figure past the previous year’s mark by the stated 6.1 percent margin.
Regional Revenue Distribution Across Key Markets
The Black Hawk region produced $81.2 million, which positioned it as the leading contributor among the three primary casino areas tracked in the report, followed by Cripple Creek at $17.5 million and Central City at $7.1 million. Those three locations together accounted for the full statewide total, and the distribution highlights how activity concentrated in the largest market while the smaller venues still recorded their respective shares. Black Hawk’s $81.2 million figure alone represented more than three-quarters of the $105.8 million statewide sum, which underscores the scale of operations in that specific corridor compared with the other two regions.

Cripple Creek’s $17.5 million and Central City’s $7.1 million completed the regional breakdown, and the combined performance across all three areas delivered the 6.1 percent statewide increase. Figures reveal that the year-over-year lift appeared consistently enough to register as the best result in thirty-six months, even though each region maintained its established ranking in total dollars generated. The 33 casinos operating within these markets supplied the raw data that state officials aggregated into the May 2026 summary, which became available for public review during the following reporting cycle.
Context of the May 2026 Reporting Cycle
State gaming records indicate the $105.8 million total emerged from activity that took place entirely within May 2026, before any subsequent months were tabulated. The 6.1 percent gain compared with May 2025 positioned the period as an improvement over the prior twelve months, while the slot and table splits provided additional granularity on where that growth materialized. Central City’s $7.1 million, though the smallest of the three regional amounts, still formed part of the overall picture that state regulators used to calculate the final statewide number.
Conclusion
The May 2026 results from Colorado’s 33 land-based casinos therefore stand as a single-month snapshot that showed $105.8 million in revenue, a 6.1 percent increase, and clear contributions from both slots at $89.5 million and tables at $16.3 million. Regional totals placed Black Hawk first at $81.2 million, Cripple Creek second at $17.5 million, and Central City third at $7.1 million. Those numbers, drawn directly from the official compilation, supply the factual record for the period without additional interpretation layered on top.