Las Vegas Casinos Tighten Operations Amid Prolonged Tourism Slump

Key Moments:

  • The Venetian has confirmed fewer than 50 employees were laid off last week.
  • Las Vegas visitation dropped by 12% in July compared to July 2024, marking a sixth straight month of year-over-year declines.
  • Multiple major casinos, including Resorts World, Fontainebleau, and Treasure Island, have executed staff cuts during the ongoing downturn.

Workforce Reductions at The Venetian

The Venetian Resort Las Vegas has moved to reduce its staff, confirming last week that fewer than 50 of its 8,500 employees were let go. The company characterized the move as a step to “streamline our organizational structure” by decreasing layers of leadership, citing goals of improved agility and decision-making. The reduction was described as being carried out with significant forethought and attention to the company’s values.

Notably, the scale of layoffs appears tied to compliance with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act, which mandates 60 days’ notice for layoffs involving 50 or more employees at one site within a 30-day period. The Venetian’s latest action marks the property’s second staff cut since July, according to Casino.org’s Vital Vegas.

Industry-Wide Challenges

Las Vegas casinos continue to take visible actions in response to the ongoing tourism downturn, despite rhetoric that may suggest otherwise. In July, Las Vegas experienced a 12% decrease in visitation compared to July 2024, making it the sixth consecutive month with declining year-over-year figures. According to reported statistics, early July 2025 hotel occupancy came in at 66.7%, representing a drop of nearly 17% from the previous year.

TIME Magazine’s August cover story captured industry sentiment, with both workers and union leaders indicating current conditions surpass even the difficulties of the pandemic era—citing economic uncertainty, higher costs, and international tensions as contributing factors.

Broader Impact Across Major Properties

Staff reductions are not isolated to The Venetian. On March 26, Resorts World carried out a similar cut involving fewer than 50 employees. The Fontainebleau dismissed up to 60 table game dealers on May 27. Additionally, Treasure Island implemented its second round of layoffs during the week of August 23, according to Las Vegas Locally.

Casino PropertyReported LayoffsDate or Period
The VenetianFewer than 50Last week
Resorts WorldFewer than 50March 26
FontainebleauUp to 60May 27
Treasure IslandSecond round this summerWeek of August 23

Sustained Uncertainty Drives Decisions

The measures undertaken by top Las Vegas gaming properties raise questions about expectations for recovery. Despite outward suggestions that the downturn could be short-lived, the recurring layoffs—and not furloughs—across multiple resorts suggest a cautious approach to ongoing operational risks.

  • Author

Daniel Williams

Daniel Williams has started his writing career as a freelance author at a local paper media. After working there for a couple of years and writing on various topics, he found his interest for the gambling industry.
Daniel Williams
Casino Guardian covers the latest news and events in the casino industry. Here you can also find extensive guides for roulette, slots, blackjack, video poker, and all live casino games as well as reviews of the most trusted UK online casinos and their mobile casino apps.

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