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Full House Resorts FLL Business Segments

Q1 '26Q4 '25Q3 '25Q2 '25Q1 '25
Revenue by Business
Contracted Sports Wagering$1.49M-12.1%$1.7M+3.9%$1.63M-1.6%$1.66M-27.2%$2.28M+22.7%
Midwest And South$59.35M+2.0%$58.16M-0.3%$58.33M+0.9%$57.8M+1.1%$57.17M+3.9%
West$13.58M-12.8%$15.56M-13.5%$17.99M+24.2%$14.49M-7.2%$15.61M-2.9%
Revenue by Product
Casino$55.71M-4.2%$58.15M-2.8%$59.82M+5.0%$56.98M+3.0%$55.3M+1.6%
Food And Beverage$9.6M-1.1%$9.71M-2.4%$9.95M+3.9%$9.58M-4.8%$10.06M-5.1%
Hotel$3.79M-5.3%$4M-10.5%$4.47M+20.0%$3.72M-3.2%$3.84M-13.1%
Other Operations$5.33M+49.6%$3.56M-4.1%$3.71M+1.3%$3.66M-37.4%$5.86M+65.6%

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Questions, answered.

How does Full House Resorts break its business down?
Full House Resorts (FLL) reports revenue by business across 3 parts — Contracted Sports Wagering, Midwest And South and West. Each is extracted from the segment footnotes and tracked over time.
Where does Full House Resorts's segment data come from?
Segment breakdowns are pulled from the segment footnotes in Full House Resorts's SEC filings (the XBRL dimensional tags), so every line ties back to a reported figure. Switch between quarterly, annual, and TTM, or open any segment for its full history.