Macau’s casino rebound kept feeding the public purse in 2025, with gaming taxes rising sharply and early 2026 figures pointing to another strong year.
Casino Taxes Still Do the Heavy Lifting
Macau collected MOP94.86 billion in gaming tax revenue in fiscal 2025, up 7.63 percent year-on-year, as gross gaming revenue climbed to MOP247.4 billion, a 9.1 percent increase from 2024.
That left little doubt about where the city’s money still comes from. Gaming taxes made up 82.7 percent of Macau’s total public revenue of MOP114.64 billion for the year, reinforcing the industry’s grip on government finances even as officials keep talking up economic diversification.
The stronger casino take also helped Macau post a fiscal surplus of MOP19.89 billion, up 26.08 percent from the previous year. For the government, that means more room to fund public services and infrastructure. For the average casino player, it is another reminder that the health of Macau’s tables and slots still matters far beyond the gaming floor.
2026 Opens With a Fast Start
The momentum has carried into 2026. In the first two months of the year, Macau brought in nearly MOP16.93 billion in gaming-related fiscal revenue, up 18.9 percent from the same period a year earlier.
February alone delivered just over MOP8.69 billion in gaming tax revenue, according to the latest figures from the Financial Services Bureau.
Under Macau’s 10-year gaming concession model, which began on January 1, 2023, the effective tax on casino gross gaming revenue is 40 percent. Even so, tax figures and GGR do not line up neatly month to month because there is usually a lag between when casino revenue is booked and when the related tax is paid.
A Huge Share of Government Income
The latest data show gaming taxes accounted for roughly 90.7 percent of Macau’s current government revenue of nearly MOP18.66 billion through February 28.
That is a striking number, and it gets to the city’s real balancing act. Macau’s casino sector is doing exactly what policymakers want in the short term: generating cash, supporting budgets, and keeping recovery on track. The harder part is building other industries that can eventually carry more of the load.
On Pace, but Still Dependent
Macau has budgeted MOP92.53 billion in gaming tax revenue for 2026. After just two months, it has already reached about 18.3 percent of that target, which puts the city in a healthy position early in the year.
Still, the broader story has not changed. Macau’s gaming industry looks sturdy, but the economy remains heavily tied to casino performance. As long as that remains true, every revenue report will land with extra weight, not just for operators and investors, but for anyone watching how durable the city’s recovery really is.










