Today · Apr 30, 2026
Caesars Digital Just Hit $69M EBITDA on 60% Growth. The Brick-and-Mortar Side Barely Moved.

Caesars Digital Just Hit $69M EBITDA on 60% Growth. The Brick-and-Mortar Side Barely Moved.

Caesars' Q1 digital segment grew EBITDA 60% while its Las Vegas and regional casino operations flatlined or declined. If you're running hotel technology at a gaming property, the investment priority just shifted underneath you... and the implications for property-level tech budgets are worth understanding before your next capital request meeting.

So here's what's actually happening at Caesars, and if you work anywhere near a gaming-adjacent hotel operation, this earnings report deserves a close read. The company just reported $2.87 billion in Q1 revenue, up 2.7% year-over-year. Sounds fine. But decompose that number and the story gets a lot more interesting. The digital segment... iGaming, sports betting, the whole online apparatus... generated $374 million in net revenue, up 11.6%, with EBITDA jumping from $43 million to $69 million. That's a 60.5% EBITDA increase. Meanwhile, Las Vegas revenue was flat at $1.003 billion, Vegas EBITDA actually dropped $7 million, and regional EBITDA declined $5 million despite a 3% revenue bump. The growth engine isn't in the building anymore. It's in the phone.

What does this mean for the physical hotels? Follow the capital. When a company's digital division is throwing off 60% EBITDA growth while the brick-and-mortar side is running in place (or backwards), guess where the next dollar of technology investment goes. It goes to the platform that's growing. I talked to a technology director at a casino resort last year who told me point blank: "We used to get whatever we asked for on the property tech side. Now every request goes through a prioritization matrix, and the digital team wins every time because their ROI numbers are insane compared to ours." That's not a complaint. That's a structural shift in how these companies allocate technology spend.

Look, Caesars is carrying $11.9 billion in debt. They posted a GAAP net loss of $98 million. The CFO is talking about "strong free cash flow in 2026" driven partly by lower capital expenditures. Lower capex plus a digital-first strategy plus massive debt service equals one thing for property-level operations: you're going to be asked to do more with less. The technology that gets funded will be whatever drives digital engagement... loyalty platform integration, mobile check-in tied to the rewards program, anything that converts a physical guest into a digital customer. The PMS upgrade you've been requesting? The WiFi infrastructure overhaul? Those compete against iGaming platform development now, and iGaming handle just grew 20%.

The loyalty play is the connective tissue here, and it's actually the most interesting technology decision in the whole earnings report. Caesars Rewards is what links 512,000 monthly unique digital players to hotel rooms and restaurant tables. Average revenue per digital player is up 15% to $219. That's not accidental... that's a technology stack (the Liberty platform they've been migrating to since the William Hill acquisition) designed to cross-sell physical stays to digital gamblers and vice versa. The question nobody's asking is whether this cross-sell actually works at property level or whether it just looks good in a segment report. Because I've seen integrated loyalty platforms that are brilliant on the analytics dashboard and completely invisible to the front desk agent who's supposed to recognize a Caesars Rewards Diamond member and deliver a differentiated experience. The system knows who the guest is. Does the person behind the desk?

Here's what matters if you're running technology at a gaming property or any hotel that interfaces with a casino loyalty ecosystem. The digital tail is now wagging the physical dog. iGaming revenue at Caesars hit $140 million in Q1, up 19%. Sports betting handle actually declined 3%, which means the growth is coming from online casino, not sports... a product with no physical footprint at all. When the fastest-growing revenue stream requires zero hotel rooms, zero restaurants, and zero housekeepers, the property becomes a customer acquisition tool for the digital business, not the other way around. That's a fundamental inversion of how casino hotels have operated for decades. And the technology priorities, the budget allocations, the vendor relationships... all of it follows that inversion whether anyone says it out loud or not.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd be doing if I were running a casino-adjacent hotel right now. First... understand that your technology budget is now competing against a digital division growing at 60%. Every capital request needs to be framed in terms of digital engagement, loyalty conversion, or guest data capture. "We need a new PMS" won't get funded. "We need a PMS that feeds real-time guest preferences into the rewards platform so digital players book more room nights" might. Second... if you're at a property that runs on Caesars Rewards (or any major gaming loyalty program), audit how well your front-line staff actually uses the loyalty data they have access to. The $219 average revenue per digital player means those guests are worth real money... and if your team can't identify them, greet them by tier, and deliver accordingly, you're leaking value that the C-suite is counting on. Third... watch the capex number. When the CFO says "lower capital expenditures" while the digital team is growing 60%, property-level deferred maintenance just became more likely. Get your infrastructure needs documented and tied to revenue impact before the next budget cycle, not after.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Read full analysis → ← Show less
Source: Google News: Caesars Entertainment
End of Stories