Checking out the latest Las Vegas news, and it seems like the Las Vegas strip is changing. Is this the end of Las Vegas vacation deals or just money grabbing by the casinos? Anthony Curtis might have the answer.
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Las Vegas is changing—quieter, pricier, and less of a “value” destination. Caesars Entertainment being dropped from the S&P 500 isn’t just a market headline; it’s a thermometer for a city that’s lost some of its magic. In 2025, visitation is slipping, prices are spiking, and resort fees topping $50 a night make the final bill sting. The result: shorter stays, cancellations, and floors that feel thinner than they look.
This breakdown follows both the numbers and the mood: Las Vegas revenues at Caesars down about 3.7% in Q2 2025, roughly 27,000 room nights gone, shares down more than 50% over two years, and debt near $12 billion. June visitation fell around 11% year over year. Californians are driving in less, Canadians and other international markets haven’t fully returned, while regional casinos and online betting keep people closer to home.
Caesars is trying band-aids—promos, a citywide “fabulous” 5-day sale, new perks for locals. But discounts don’t fix perception. If the Strip wants its heartbeat back, it needs more than coupons: clear hospitality, pricing that respects guests, and the lost feeling that anyone can still be “somebody” for a night.
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