Las Vegas generated an estimated $690.6 million in economic impact over the Fourth of July weekend, a 5.8% increase from $652.7 million last year, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA).

The economic figure came alongside higher visitor counts and hotel occupancy for the holiday period. The LVCVA recorded 329,000 visitors over the weekend, up from 310,000 a year earlier, with hotel occupancy at 88%, compared with 85.7% last year.

However, occupancy remained below historical Fourth of July levels, which have generally landed in the low-to-mid 90% range. The LVCVA attributed part of the gap to 1,000 additional hotel rooms online this year compared with 2025, which affects the occupancy calculation.

Data adds to Wall Street optimism

The holiday weekend results follow a series of data points that gaming analysts cite as evidence of a summer recovery for the market. May visitation rose 2% year-over-year, and June figures, not yet released, are expected to show further gains given casino promotions and the World Cup.

The gains follow a decline in visitation of more than 7% last year.

Chad Beynon, Senior Gaming Analyst with Macquarie Group, noted the Las Vegas Strip posted a 13% increase in gaming revenue in May as further signs of a Las Vegas turnaround this summer.

Non-gaming metrics also advanced: revenue per room on the Strip rose nearly 10% in May amid higher room rates and occupancy, while convention attendance increased 15% for the month.

“Vegas data through June 20 suggests Strip revenue per room growth should be mid-single digits for the second quarter,” Beynon said. “Although visitation was modestly positive, we view the improving revenue per room trajectory as a key indicator of Strip health and a potential driver of continued upside.

“The strong May print, combined with an easier comp backdrop, now suggests upside to second quarter Vegas earnings expectations,” Beynon added.

Analysts see uneven gains across operators

David Katz of Jefferies Equities Research said Las Vegas metrics are benefiting from easier year-over-year comparisons. Gaming revenue in April and May rose 10% over 2025 even as visitor volumes increased just 0.1% over the same two months, a gap Katz attributed in part to a stronger convention calendar.

“Against this backdrop, we expect upcoming operator prints to indicate stable trends in the market, with Caesars Entertainment appearing the primary beneficiary of State Farm-driven group demand, while MGM Entertainment International is more leveraged to high-end baccarat strength,” Katz said.

“Our view remains that longer-term growth durability is less certain absent a more pronounced recovery in leisure demand, given the inherent cyclical nature of group travel and evidence that all-inclusive promotional offerings are stabilizing lower-end consumer spend. In short, we expect positive second quarter earnings amid longer-term uncertainty,” he added.

Original article: https://www.yogonet.com/international/news/2026/07/07/125245-las-vegas-fourth-of-july-weekend-delivers-6906-million-economic-impact