The global land-based casino sector is navigating a period of rapid change as regulatory reforms, new resort projects and shifting tribal-state agreements converge to reshape physical gambling over the coming year.
Regulatory shake-up in Britain tightens focus on bricks-and-mortar venues
In the United Kingdom, a package of draft secondary legislation published in 2025 aims to modernize the regulatory framework for land-based casinos, with key measures introduced in May and slated to come into force later in 2025 and into 2026. Changes under the draft Casinos (Gaming Machines and Mandatory Conditions) Regulations would alter machine limits and table-area requirements for small casinos, while other linked statutory instruments adjust licensing procedures across England and Wales. The reforms are part of a broader DCMS effort to rebalance oversight between online and land-based gambling and follow intense scrutiny over consumer protections. The government’s regulatory documents and draft instruments set out both the technical changes and the timeline for parliamentary scrutiny. Read the draft package on the government website. Draft secondary legislation on land-based casinos.
Regulators have signaled they will use new powers to tighten safety conditions and enforcement. The UK Gambling Commission has also secured additional funding to step up enforcement against illegal operators, underscoring a regulatory pivot that could raise compliance costs for legitimate venues while removing rogue competitors.
New developments and expansion projects drive competition in the U.S.
Meanwhile in the United States, major resort and regional casino projects continue to push forward. Caesars Entertainment’s partnership with Lisa Vanderpump to relaunch The Cromwell as The Vanderpump Hotel is due to debut in early 2026, reflecting a strategy by major operators to refresh boutique offerings on the Las Vegas Strip to capture high-end leisure demand. In Southern Nevada, Boyd Gaming’s Cadence Crossing project — replacing the Jokers Wild site — is scheduled to open phases through 2025-2026 with a 10,000-square-foot casino floor and expanded amenities targeted at suburban growth corridors.
Urban casino development remains politically charged. Chicago’s Bally’s project, transitioning from a temporary River West site toward a permanent integrated resort on the North Branch of the Chicago River, continues to be a focal point for debates about urban economic development, tax agreements and neighborhood impacts as the company moves toward full buildout and operations ramp-up.
Tribal compacts and state negotiations shape regional market access
Tribal gaming negotiations are also moving at pace. States across the U.S. have continued negotiating compact amendments that address Class III gaming, electronic table games and other modernization issues. For example, Washington State commissions and tribes have scheduled public hearings and commission votes in late 2025 and early January 2026 to consider proposed compact amendments that could expand electronic offerings and adjust operational terms. These negotiations will determine whether tribes can introduce new game types and adjust smoking and customer protection provisions — outcomes with direct revenue implications for both tribal communities and state tax receipts.
Why this matters
The intersecting trends — regulatory reform in the UK, fresh investment in marquee U.S. resorts, and active tribal-state bargaining — signal a recalibration of the land-based casino industry toward enhanced oversight, product modernization and place-based experiences. Operators face a dual challenge: meet tighter regulatory expectations while investing in physical properties and partnerships that attract customers back from online platforms.
What to watch next
Parliamentary scrutiny and final sign-off on the UK statutory instruments through mid-2026, and how regulators implement enforcement funding to disrupt illegal venues.
Opening timelines and economic performance reports from newly renovated or built U.S. Strip properties in 2026, starting with boutique relaunches and suburban casino rollouts.
Outcomes of tribal compact votes and subsequent filings with governors and the U.S. Department of the Interior, particularly those scheduled for early January 2026, which will clarify the future scope of tribe-run Class III gaming.
