New analysis by Gambling.com ranks the 12 major casino entertainment venues on the Las Vegas Strip and the 10 highest-grossing residencies of all time, revealing how the Sphere has tripled per-show economics and shifted live music from a comp strategy into a primary revenue driver.
- The top 10 residencies have generated $2.03bn gross across 2,025 shows.
- U2’s 40-show Sphere residency set the per-show record at $6.11m, roughly 10x the per-show grosses of the Dion, Elton John and Britney Spears era.
- The Eagles are now averaging $4.84m per show across 28 reported Sphere dates, with their residency still running into 2026.
- Bruno Mars has quietly passed $197m across 110 shows at Dolby Live, the highest-grossing residency of the post-Dion era at a non-Sphere venue.
- Céline Dion remains the all-time top earner at $681m across two Colosseum runs (714 + 427 shows).
- Two venues opened in 2023: the Sphere (17,600 seats) and BleauLive Theater (3,800 seats).
- Nevada gaming revenue hit a record $15.8bn in 2025 despite visitor numbers falling 7.5% to 38.5m.
- More than 25 residencies are confirmed for 2026 across six major venues, the deepest calendar on record.

12 Venues, 17,600 to 1,000 Seats
Las Vegas now hosts 12 purpose-built concert and entertainment venues inside casino complexes, ranging from the 1,000-capacity Voltaire at The Venetian to the 17,600-seat Sphere, the world’s largest spherical structure, which opened in September 2023.
The Top 10 Has Crossed $2bn
The 10 highest-grossing residencies of all time have collectively grossed $2.03bn. The model was pioneered by Caesars Entertainment, which built The Colosseum specifically for Céline Dion in 2003. Her A New Day run remains the single highest-grossing residency at $385.1m across 714 shows.

The economics have since shifted twice. First, modern theatre acts like Adele, Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga pushed per-show grosses from under $1m into the $1.5m to $2m range. Then the Sphere reset the ceiling entirely. U2’s residency averaged $6.11m per show, more than 10x the Dion-era benchmark. The Eagles are running at $4.84m, Dead & Company at $4.39m. Three of the top 10 are now Sphere productions, with the Eagles still adding to their total.
Dean Ryan, Betting Expert at Gambling.com, said: “The Sphere didn’t just raise the ceiling on residency economics, it reset what artists and operators expect from each other. U2 grossed $6m a show. The Eagles are averaging $4.8m and still playing. Bruno Mars has quietly passed $197m at a venue a quarter of the Sphere’s size. Every stage on the Strip now has to ask what it offers beyond a seat. The record gaming revenues despite falling visitor numbers tell the same story: Las Vegas is becoming a destination for people who spend, not just people who come.”
2026: The Deepest Residency Calendar On Record
More than 25 residencies are confirmed for 2026 across six major venues, the strongest calendar in Las Vegas history.
The Sphere leads with nine acts: the Eagles, Backstreet Boys (Into the Millennium), Zac Brown Band, ILLENIUM, Phish, No Doubt, Kenny Chesney, CarÃn León and Metallica. The Colosseum hosts Jennifer Lopez, Kelly Clarkson, Rod Stewart, Cyndi Lauper, Josh Groban, Dolly Parton, LISA and a Nikki Glaser & David Spade run. Dolby Live has Mariah Carey, New Kids on the Block and Mary J. Blige. BleauLive Theater has Marc Anthony. The Pearl Concert Theater hosts Babyface. International Theater at Westgate has Barry Manilow and Donny Osmond, while Santana continues at the House of Blues at Mandalay Bay.
The spread of genres, pop, rock, EDM, Latin, R&B, country, metal and música mexicana reflects a deliberate operator strategy to broaden appeal beyond the traditional Las Vegas demographic.
Gaming Revenue Record On Lower Visitor Numbers
Nevada gaming revenue reached a record $15.80bn in 2025, the fifth consecutive year of record annual revenue. Visitor numbers fell 7.5% to 38.5m. The pattern points to a structural shift: fewer visitors spending significantly more, with entertainment increasingly driving the decision to visit.







