Posted on: February 16, 2026, 07:21h.
Last updated on: February 5, 2026, 12:57h.
Las Vegas has now logged 10 straight months where gaming win is up even as visitation is down. That odd split has fueled a popular theory: that casinos are secretly taking more money from slot machines than what they are legally allowed to. They aren’t — and they can’t. Here’s why…

Casinos Wouldn’t Risk Their Licenses
Nevada casinos must keep detailed slot‑performance logs, and Gaming Control Board agents conduct unannounced audits. With more than 200 casinos in Clark County alone, each property is typically inspected every two to three years. Nevada also taxes gaming win at 6.75%, so the state has every incentive to monitor accuracy.
Slot Machines Can’t be Set Above the Legal Limit
As two senior Gaming Control Board officials told the Las Vegas Review-Journal recently, it’s technically impossible to exceed the legal maximum slot hold (the share of gamblers’ money the casino keeps).
That’s because slot machines come with preset, legal payout configurations baked into their software. Casinos can only choose from those presets. They can’t create a custom, higher‑hold setting.
No One Can Detect RTP Changes Anyway
Average slot holds are computed after millions of spins. Over the course of one spin, or even 100, the money returned to a player (RTP) can vary wildly, from as little as 0% to as much as 100,000,000% of the bet or more.
UNLV’s Anthony Lucas and SDSU’s Katherine Spilde published a 2021 study testing whether players notice differences in slot payback. They compared four pairs of identical slot titles over six months:
- High‑RTP versions returned ~$95 per $100 wagered
- Low‑RTP versions returned ~$85 per $100 wagered
The players did not migrate to the higher‑paying machines. Even over half a year, they couldn’t tell the difference.
What is True
Slots are tightening — though it’s entirely legal and you can’t perceive it. A December 2025 report from the UNLV Center for Gaming Research shows that the statewide slot hold percentage has risen by 26% over the past 21 years.
In 2004, it averaged 5.72%, meaning that machines paid back 94.28% of all money wagered. In 2025, the statewide hold averaged 7.15%.
However, and this is the real point, Nevada law mandates only that slot machines pay back at least 75% of the money put into them, making anything short of a 25% hold entirely lawful.
Look for “Vegas Myths Busted” every Monday at Casino.org. Visit VegasMythsBusted.com to read previously busted Vegas myths. Got a suggestion for a Vegas myth that needs busting? Email corey@casino.org.

