Key Highlights
- April 2026 gaming tax collections totaled MOP9.07 billion ($1.12 billion), showing a 2.3% rise from March’s figures
- First four months of 2026 generated MOP34.87 billion in casino taxes, marking a 16.9% jump versus the 2025 equivalent period
- Casino taxation comprised approximately 86.5% of Macau’s aggregate current revenue through the April period
- Collections through April account for roughly 37.9% of the annual gaming tax projection of MOP92.53 billion
- Casino operators face a 40% levy on gross gaming receipts under current concession agreements launched in January 2023
Macau’s Financial Services Bureau has confirmed that gambling tax collections for April 2026 totaled MOP9.07 billion, equivalent to approximately $1.12 billion. The data underscores the continuing importance of casino operations to territorial finances.
April’s intake represented a 2.3% climb over March’s MOP8.87 billion haul. The consecutive monthly performance demonstrates sustained tax flow from gaming establishments to government accounts.
Cumulative gaming tax receipts for the January-through-April window reached MOP34.87 billion. This represented a notable 16.9% expansion compared to the corresponding four-month span in 2025.
The statistics underscore the casino sector’s dominant position in Macau’s revenue structure. Gambling taxes constituted nearly 86.5% of the territory’s MOP40.30 billion total current revenue recorded by April’s conclusion.
40% Tax Rate Anchors Government Income Stream
Macau’s gaming concession framework, operational since January 1, 2023, imposes a 40% taxation rate on operators’ gross gaming receipts. This ten-year arrangement covers all authorized casino license holders throughout the territory.
April’s MOP9.07 billion collection followed the previous month’s MOP8.87 billion intake, demonstrating incremental growth. While official tax figures don’t precisely correlate with same-month casino revenue due to payment timing differences, they provide strong indicators of sectoral performance.
Financial Services Bureau records confirm that gaming taxation remained Macau’s overwhelming primary revenue source during the year’s initial months. Other revenue categories lag far behind in comparison.
This concentration is strikingly evident in the data. With casino taxes representing more than 86% of current revenue, governmental fiscal stability remains deeply intertwined with gaming industry outcomes.
The MOP34.87 billion four-month accumulation equals approximately 37.9% of Macau’s full-year gaming tax estimate of nearly MOP92.53 billion. Having secured over one-third of the annual projection with two-thirds of the year ahead suggests favorable positioning.
Opening Months Signal Robust Revenue Trajectory
The initial 2026 performance indicates Macau is progressing favorably against revenue projections. The 16.9% year-over-year advancement through April demonstrates meaningful expansion relative to 2025 results.
A temporal disconnect exists between when operators report gross gaming receipts and when corresponding tax payments appear in government accounts. This lag means monthly tax data shouldn’t be interpreted as precise real-time mirrors of casino performance for identical periods.
Despite this limitation, the information clearly illustrates the gaming sector’s pivotal economic role. Tax collections have advanced on both monthly sequential and annual comparative measurements.
Macau’s casino landscape endured considerable challenges throughout pandemic years but has demonstrated steady recuperation since. Current figures reflect this continuing revival trajectory.
The territory maintains its position among the planet’s premier gambling destinations. Revenue statistics attract close scrutiny from investment analysts, industry observers, and policymakers as key indicators of broader economic recovery momentum.
With April showing upward movement and year-to-date totals substantially exceeding 2025 benchmarks, casino taxation remains the cornerstone supporting Macau’s governmental revenue infrastructure.


