The sports betting and casino business has been a hard place to make money for most of 2025, and Penn Entertainment spent much of the year showing why. Q1 flipped the narrative.
The regional casino operator beat expectations across nearly every line, lifted its full-year guidance, and sent shares up roughly 6.64% in premarket trading Wednesday. The real story sits in the online casino business, where revenue grew at a pace that's rare in any segment.
The Numbers Behind The Move
Total revenue landed around $1.4 billion, up about 6% from a year earlier. The more important figure for investors was adjusted EBITDAR - a measure of cash profit before interest, taxes, and rent - which came in at $471.4 million.
Operating income more than doubled year over year, climbing 127%.
Penn's interactive segment, which houses ESPN Bet and iCasino, improved adjusted EBITDA by roughly $78 million versus the prior year. That's the kind of swing that changes the story at a holding company level, because interactive is where Penn has been burning the most cash trying to build a real sports betting and online gaming brand.
The iCasino Surge iCasino net gaming revenue grew 362% year over year on a standalone basis, which is the number that jumps off the page. iCasino is an online casino product that lets users play slots and table games directly on their phone, and it carries much higher margins than retail sports betting because the house holds a bigger share of every dollar wagered. Penn has been pushing hard into iCasino while most of the industry focuses on live sports betting, and the early results suggest the strategy is working.
Online sports betting revenue grew 5% in the quarter, which is respectable, but the iCasino number is what turned the stock green. The math angle: iCasino's margin profile means every dollar of revenue drops more to the bottom line than a dollar of sportsbook revenue does.
That's why operating income grew so much faster than top-line revenue.
The Raised Outlook
CFO Felicia Kantor Hendrix bumped Penn's full-year 2026 revenue guidance up by $20 million and EBITDAR guidance up by $12 million. Those are small numbers in dollar terms but a strong signal that Q1 wasn't a one-off.
Raises this early in a fiscal year are rare and typically point to a sustained improvement in underlying trends. Penn has spent two years convincing investors its ESPN partnership could turn into real profit, and this quarter is the first that gives the pitch some numbers to stand on.
The company still has to prove it can keep the interactive segment improving, but the direction of travel is now clearly positive.
What To Watch
Q2 earnings will be the first test of whether the iCasino trajectory holds. Watch for continued revenue growth in the interactive segment along with further margin improvement.
If both trends continue, Penn's guidance raise will look conservative by year end.
