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Caesars Is Done Buying Gamblers. Now They're Harvesting Them.

Caesars Digital just posted record Q1 revenue of $374 million while spending less to acquire customers, and their secret weapon is the same loyalty program that fills your hotel rooms. If you're running a Caesars-affiliated property, the sportsbook strategy is about to change what walks through your lobby door.

Caesars Is Done Buying Gamblers. Now They're Harvesting Them.

I worked with a casino resort GM once who kept two whiteboards in his office. One tracked gaming revenue. The other tracked what he called "the real number"... total property spend per guest, broken out by how they found the place. Loyalty program guests outspent walk-ins by 40% on rooms, F&B, and spa. Not because they were richer. Because the program had already trained them to spend. Every dollar Caesars puts into that rewards ecosystem comes back through your rate, your minibar, your steakhouse check. That GM understood something most hotel operators don't think about enough... the acquisition channel shapes the guest behavior long after check-in.

So here's what's happening at Caesars Digital, and why it matters even if you've never placed a bet in your life. Their sportsbook division just hit $374 million in first-quarter net revenue, up nearly 12% year over year. But here's the part that should get your attention... they did it while mobile betting volume actually dropped 3%. Revenue up, volume down. That means they're squeezing more out of every player. Average revenue per monthly unique player jumped 15% to $219. Hold percentage climbed to 8.3%, up from 5.4% a couple years ago. CEO Tom Reeg called it the "free cash flow harvesting stage." That's not a throwaway line. That's a strategic declaration. They're done spending wildly to acquire new bettors. They're monetizing the ones they already have. And they're doing it through the Caesars Rewards program... the same program that drives room nights, comps, and tier-based loyalty across the entire property portfolio.

This matters to hotel operators because the profile of the guest walking through your doors is shifting. Caesars isn't running $1,000 risk-free bet promotions anymore to lure in casual bettors who'll never come back. Their current offer... bet a dollar, get ten profit boosts capped at $25 each... is designed to keep existing users engaged, not to create new ones from scratch. That's a fundamentally different acquisition philosophy. It means the sportsbook is feeding the loyalty program more efficiently, which means the guests being driven to Caesars properties are increasingly repeat, higher-value, rewards-motivated travelers. If you're operating a Caesars-affiliated hotel, your comp mix is going to look different. More loyalty-driven bookings, fewer transient walk-ins chasing a Super Bowl promo they saw on Instagram.

There's another move here worth paying attention to. Caesars pulled credit card deposits from their sportsbook platform back in April, joining DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, and bet365 in what's become an industry-wide shift. The responsible gambling angle is real and it matters. But from an operational perspective, it also means the sportsbook customer base is self-selecting for people with actual bankrolls, not people borrowing from Visa to chase a parlay. That's a healthier customer for your hotel too. Someone funding a sportsbook account with a debit card or bank transfer is more likely to be a planned-trip, budgeted guest than an impulse gambler on a credit card bender. The downstream effect on your property... fewer comps going to guests who were never going to spend beyond the freebie, more comps going to guests who are already in the spending mindset.

The bigger picture here is that Caesars is proving something the rest of the industry should study. They figured out that the most expensive thing in any customer relationship is the first transaction. Once you own that customer through a loyalty ecosystem that crosses digital betting, hotel stays, dining, and entertainment... you stop paying acquisition costs and start collecting margin. The sportsbook isn't a standalone business anymore. It's a funnel. And the hotel is where the funnel delivers its highest-margin output. If you're on the Caesars platform, understand that dynamic and lean into it. If you're not, understand that your competitors who ARE on it are getting guests pre-qualified by a digital engagement engine you don't have access to.

Operator's Take

If you're a GM at a Caesars-affiliated property, pull your loyalty contribution numbers for Q1 and compare them to the same period last year. I'd bet they're up, and if they are, that's not an accident... it's the direct result of this digital strategy shift. Build your forecasting around higher loyalty mix, not higher volume. That means your rate integrity on loyalty bookings matters more than ever because these guests are worth more over their lifetime. Talk to your revenue manager about protecting rate on rewards-driven segments instead of discounting to fill gaps. And if you're running F&B or entertainment, look at your Caesars Rewards redemption data... that's where the incremental spend lives now. The sportsbook is doing the prospecting for you. Your job is to convert the visit into a repeat stay.

Source: Google News: Caesars Entertainment
📊 Revenue Management 👤 Tom Reeg 🏢 Caesars Digital 🏢 Caesars Entertainment 📌 Caesars Rewards 📊 Guest Acquisition Channels 📊 Loyalty Programs
The views, analysis, and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of InnBrief. InnBrief provides hospitality industry intelligence and commentary for informational purposes only. Readers should conduct their own due diligence before making business decisions based on any content published here.