The question of whether Asia has too many casinos is no longer theoretical. Manila’s land-based casinos are fighting for the same players. Vietnam’s resorts are posting losses despite government support. Macau still sits below its 2019 peak. The answer is nuanced — but the evidence is real.
In some markets, yes. In others, no. The Philippines’ Metro Manila land-based casino market is showing genuine saturation signals — four major integrated resorts competing for the same premium player pool, with licensed casino GGR down 9.58% in 2025. Vietnam’s resort operators are posting losses despite 88% local revenue dependency. But Macau is growing and Singapore maintains controlled scarcity by design. Asia does not have a casino glut — it has specific oversupplied markets alongside healthy constrained ones.
The idea of an Asian casino glut would have seemed absurd a decade ago, when every new integrated resort seemed to print money and new markets appeared perpetually on the horizon. The reality of 2026 is more complicated. Some markets have overbuilt for their current player pool. Others are constrained by design and performing well. Understanding which is which matters enormously for anyone evaluating the industry — whether as a player, an investor, or a policy observer.
The Philippines Case: Real Saturation Signals
The Philippines is where the glut argument is strongest. Metro Manila’s integrated resort market — Solaire, Okada Manila, City of Dreams, and Resorts World Manila — is competing for a player pool that has not grown proportionally to the casino floor space available. Licensed casino GGR fell 9.58% in 2025, to PHP182.50 billion. PAGCOR-operated casino revenue fell 20.95%.
Industry commentator Daniel Cheng described the situation to GGRAsia as “a market facing an ongoing correction that has yet to find a floor, while simultaneously grappling with the predicament of new gaming positions flooding a local market that has surged past its saturation point.”
The irony: The only segment growing in the Philippines is online gaming — up 30% to PHP201 billion in 2025. The land-based glut is real; it has just been offset by a digital boom that keeps total GGR in positive territory. This will not last forever if the land-based floor keeps expanding while the physical player base does not.
Vietnam: Profits Elusive Despite Policy Support
Vietnam is perhaps the most instructive case. The government has extended its locals pilot program twice, most recently expanding it to Grand Ho Tram in January 2026. Vietnamese players now represent 88% of casino revenue despite being only 52% of visitors — proving that domestic demand exists. And yet Grand Ho Tram was posting persistent operating losses before the locals program opened, and continues to struggle with profitability even with government support. The resort’s investor has sought an extension of the project completion deadline to December 2027.
The Vietnam case suggests that even with strong domestic demand, casino resort economics are difficult to achieve when investment costs are high, the physical locations are remote, and the regulatory framework remains cautious.
Macau: Growing but Below Peak
Macau does not have a glut problem — it has a recovery problem. GGR for January-May 2026 is up 10.9% year-on-year but still 13.8% below the 2019 pre-pandemic peak. The six-operator market is functioning as intended — a licensed oligopoly where competition is structural but market entry is controlled. No glut here. If anything, the constraint on new licence grants creates artificial scarcity that protects operator margins.
Singapore: Controlled Scarcity by Design
Singapore is the counter-example to the glut argument. Two resorts, one regulatory framework, no new licences planned. Marina Bay Sands consistently ranks as one of the most profitable casino properties in the world by revenue per square metre. The scarcity model works. Singapore’s government understood from the outset that the risk of overbuilding was more dangerous than the opportunity cost of constraining supply.
“Every country in East Asia that prohibits its citizens from entering casinos will never enjoy the economic impacts that integrated casino resorts can have on a nation.”
— Gaming analyst Andrew KlebanowVerdict: Glut or Growing Pains?
Asia does not have a casino glut in any uniform sense. What it has is:
- Metro Manila: genuine saturation — four premium IRs, insufficient premium player growth, declining land-based GGR
- Vietnam: not a glut, but profitability elusive — demand exists but economics are difficult
- Macau: a recovery story, not a glut story — below peak, growing steadily
- Singapore: purposefully constrained, not oversupplied — scarcity model working
- Japan: genuinely undersupplied — one casino for 125 million people
The broader point is that Asia’s casino markets are maturing at different rates. Saturation in Manila does not mean saturation in Asia. The markets that will succeed long-term are those that control supply intelligently — like Singapore — rather than those that allow demand signals to be chased by unconstrained new floor space.
Frequently Asked Questions
Published June 17, 2026. Data from PAGCOR 2025 Annual Report, DICJ Macau, and GGRAsia. Analysis represents CasinoBait’s editorial assessment based on publicly available market data.

