🌍 Market

Maryland

3 stories · First covered Feb 8, 2026 · Latest Mar 18

Maryland represents a significant gaming and hospitality market in the Mid-Atlantic region, characterized by strong casino-resort operations that drive substantial lodging demand. The state's gaming revenue performance directly influences hotel occupancy patterns and average daily rates across the market, particularly in properties integrated with casino operations.

The Maryland market includes major casino-resort properties such as MGM National Harbor and Live! Casino, which function as anchor hospitality assets. These properties generate considerable gaming revenue that supports hotel operations and contributes to overall market dynamics. Casino performance metrics serve as leading indicators for hotel performance in Maryland, making gaming revenue trends critical for operators and investors monitoring the region.

Hotel operators in Maryland must account for the outsized influence of gaming revenue on market conditions. Strategic decisions regarding room inventory, pricing, and amenity investment should reflect the correlation between casino performance and lodging demand in this market segment.

Competes with Algorithmic Pricing
Maryland Coverage
Your RMS Is About to Need a Lawyer in Four States

Your RMS Is About to Need a Lawyer in Four States

Connecticut, Maryland, Ohio, and Tennessee are pushing bills broad enough to regulate how your hotel sets rates tonight... and the penalties in some of these states make your annual RMS subscription look like a rounding error.

State Algorithmic Pricing Bills Are Coming for Your RMS. Most Hotels Aren't Ready.

State Algorithmic Pricing Bills Are Coming for Your RMS. Most Hotels Aren't Ready.

Four states are pushing legislation that could require your revenue management system to explain itself, limit how often it changes rates, or make you liable when the algorithm gets it wrong. Tennessee's bill is already law.

Maryland Casino Revenue Shows Why Your Hotel-Casino Strategy Needs a Rewrite

Maryland's casinos pulled in $179 million in January gaming revenue — not the $7.9M the headline claims — and if you're running a hotel near any of these properties, you need to understand what's actually happening to feeder demand.