Total gaming taxes collected by the Macau Special Administrative Region from January through May have reached a substantial MOP 42.52 billion ($5.27 billion equivalent), according to the latest data publicized by the Financial Services Bureau.

Just within the month of May, total casino tax receipts amounted to more than MOP 7.65 billion ($1.12 billion), underscoring the massive fiscal scale of the gaming sector’s direct contribution to municipal public finances.
Sequential Monthly Fluctuations Under the Ten Year Concession
However, when matched against the preceding month of April, which logged an intake of MOP 9.07 billion—the fiscal collection for May reflects a sequential contraction of 15.7%.
Despite this short-term monthly ease, the Bureau’s data reveals that cumulative year-to-date tax receipts significantly outperform the revenue levels achieved during the identical five-month timeline last year, recording a clear annual increase of 21.9%.
Under Macau’s current 10-year gaming concession framework, which officially commenced on January 1, 2023, licensed casino properties are subject to an effective tax rate of 40% on all gross gaming revenue (GGR). The latest tax figures show that these casino receipts generated a staggering 87.5% of the Macau government’s MOP 48.62 billion in total current revenue recorded through May 31, proving how tightly tied public sector finances remain to active casino operations.
Accounting Intervals and the Full Year Fiscal Target
The Financial Services Bureau reminded public market analysts that calendar period tax receipts are not directly comparable to casino gross gaming revenue figures recorded during the identical month. This structural accounting difference is caused by a standard administrative delay between the point at which monthly GGR is calculated on casino floors and the point at which operators officially process and register the corresponding tax clearance with the treasury.
While this timing lag means the monthly tax intake does not move in perfect lockstep with immediate GGR fluctuations, the data remains the primary metric used to evaluate the fiscal health of the territory. The government expects to collect a total of MOP 92.53 billion in gaming taxes throughout the 2026 fiscal year.
Having captured nearly 46.0% of that benchmark within the first five months, Macau is positioned to meet its full-year revenue target well ahead of schedule, reinforcing gaming as the core backbone of the city’s economic architecture.

