While Atlantic City Land-Based Revenue Remains Flat, NJ Online Casino Up 17.5% In June
State taxes from iCasino come in at double those generated by B&M and sports betting combined

With every month of gaming revenue reports in New Jersey, the trajectories become more entrenched: Land-based casino numbers stay level, while online casino revenue keeps rising. The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement reported June’s figures on Thursday afternoon and they kept the trend intact, as Atlantic City casino win dipped 0.7% year-over-year and mobile casino win jumped 17.5% over June 2025.
The online casino haul across the Garden State’s 28 active skins came out to $271 million — about $5 million off the state record set in May. That makes iCasino about 5.4% more lucrative than its brick-and-mortar counterpart, as Atlantic City’s nine properties reported $257.3 million in win for the month.
Year-to-date, land-based win is up 2.3%, while internet gaming win has spiked 15%.
The online casino revenue in June produced a $60.4 million tax haul for the state, about double the combined tax revenue from B&M casinos ($18.9 million) and sports betting ($12.4 million). In total, the state collected $91.7 million in tax revenue.
A closer look at the verticals reveals land-based slot revenue was up 1.7% year-over-year but table games declined 6.4%.
Order of operations
FanDuel Casino, tethered to the Golden Nugget property, remains the biggest earner in the online space in New Jersey, generating $62.5 million in gaming win in June, up 17.2% over the previous June.
DraftKings Casino remained in second place with $47.1 million (up 8%), but third-place BetMGM is gaining ground, its $35.4 million representing a 17.3% rise over 2025.
The other skins with eight-figure revenue for the month: Borgata at $21.1 million, up 5.6%; Hard Rock Bet at $18.7 million, up 38.8%; Caesars Palace at $17.6 million, down 0.7%; BetFanatics at $13.7 million, up a staggering 276.9%; and BetRivers at $10.9 million, up 41.6%.
On the brick-and-mortar side, Borgata remains the state’s top property, though its $72.2 million haul was down 5.9% compared to June 2025. Hard Rock placed second with $46.2 million (up 0.9%) and Ocean was third with $43.5 million (down 0.2%)
Interestingly, the state’s sportsbooks had a relatively rocky month, showing combined revenue of $57.3 million, down 37.7% year-over-year despite a 16% increase in handle. Clearly, the NBA championship success of the Knicks had a similar impact in New Jersey to what New York sportsbooks reported, as the statewide sports betting hold for the month in Jersey came out to a modest 6.2%, compared to an overall win rate for the year of 8.9%.

Eric has been a professional editor and writer for more than 25 years, including nearly 20 years of experience covering the gambling industry. He was editor-in-chief of the poker magazine All In from 2005-2015 and manag…



