Partouche sees revenues climb by six per cent in 2025 as casino renovations pay off
Investments in casinos at Annemasse, Divonne, and La Tour-de-Salvagny drive sharp increases for Partouche
French casino and hotel operator Groupe Partouche saw its revenues improve by six per cent in 2025 with Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR) reaching € 748.3m, marking an increase of 5.1 per cent.
The 2024 renovations of three of the largest casinos in Annemasse, Divonne, and La Tour-de-Salvagny paid off, as their GGR recorded strong growth of 20.9 per cent, 17.7 per cent, and 15.0 per cent, respectively. In the fourth quarter of 2025, GGR increased by 6.4 per cent to €197.8m.
In France, Partouche benefited from a 4.9 per cent increase in attendance and grew by 5.2 per cent to €669.4m. GGR of all gaming categories improved: slot machines saw a 3.7 per cent increase to €522.6m, electronic table games a 10.6 per cent increase to €86.9m, and non-electronic table games a 12 per cent increase to €59.9m. In Q4 2025, GGR increased by 6.1 per cent to €177m, compared to €166.9m a year earlier.
Internationally, Partouche saw its GGR increase by 3.5 per cent year-on-year to €78.9m, compared to €76.3m a year earlier, including a favourable exchange rate effect of €1.4m related to the Meyrin casino in Switzerland. Slot machines GGR rose by 3.1 per cent to €40.7m, as for traditional games GGR was up 3.8 per cent to €38.2m, driven by Swiss online games, which were up 7.9 per cent to €25.4m. In Q4 2025, GGR reached €20.8m, representing a nine per cent increase compared to Q4 2024.
At a constant scope of consolidation, excluding the acquisition of Casino Partouche Cannes 50 Croisette on February 28 2025 and the opening on January 28 2025 of Cotonou casino in the Republic of Benin, GGR increased to €734.1m up three per cent.
Turnover excluding NGR increased by 12.4 per cent for Partouche to €110.7m, driven by casinos’ non-gaming turnover, which reached €65.5m, up 17.5 per cent, including online gaming turnover from the Belgian subsidiary Casino de Middelkerke, up €2.8m, up 88 per cent. The division Other grew 18.6 per cent to €13.8m, primarily due to the strong performance of Copal Beach in Cannes, which was up by 75.9 per cent.
