Mississippi (down 3.6%) and South Dakota (down 2.2%) saw their annual revenue decrease compared with 2021. This included the new Nebraska market, as well as four states that reported their first full year of revenue: Arizona, Connecticut, Virginia and Wyoming. Thirty-two jurisdictions saw an increase in gambling revenue compared with 2021, with 29 states setting new annual records. The association split several statewide markets into smaller regional components, including Pennsylvania, Nevada, Louisiana and Mississippi, diluting their overall ranking nationwide. Louis market spanning parts of Missouri and Illinois ($1.1 billion, up 3.6%) and the Boulder Strip in Nevada ($966 million, virtually flat compared with last year).
($2.2 billion, up 8.7%) the Chicago region spanning parts of Illinois and Indiana ($2.1 billion, up 6.1%) the Mississippi Gulf coast ($1.6 billion, down 0.5%) New York City ($1.5 billion, up 2.6%) Philadelphia ($1.4 billion, down 1.8%) Detroit ($1.3 billion, down 1.4%) the St. The top 10 are: the Las Vegas Strip ($8.2 billion, up 17%) Atlantic City ($2.8 billion, up 8.5%) Baltimore-Washington D.C.