Las Vegas’s tipped workers say their income has fallen by more than half as tourism plunges - The felters become the felted

Las Vegas workers have seen their income from tips plunge by as much as 50% — despite the recently passed no tax on tips law — as tourism to Sin City takes a hit from President Trump’s global trade war.

“No tax on tips, that’s a rad thing. But it doesn’t really do us much good if there isn’t any people to get tips from,” Charlie Mungo, a 36-year-old tattoo artist in downtown Las Vegas, told the Wall Street Journal.

Mungo said he has made about $1,500 a month in recent months.

He added that Canadian customers, who made up about 30% of his clientele, have vanished.

“We’re all starting to freak out,” he told the Journal.

Overall visitations to the city are down more than 6% through the first half of the year, with April 2025 recording just over 3.3 million visitors, representing a 5.1% drop from the previous April, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA).

Airport traffic has also decreased, with April passenger traffic at Harry Reid International Airport totaling 4.7 million, down 3.4% from April 2024.

International visitor arrivals fell over 13% in June compared to the previous year, while domestic travel saw a 6.5% decline year-over-year, based on CoStar data.

The overall decline in tourism has hurt service sector workers who were expecting to benefit from Trump’s campaign pledge to eliminate taxes on tips.

The legislation was included in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” signed earlier this month, and exempted up to $25,000 in annual tips from personal income taxes — retroactive to the start of the year.

Jacob Soto, a 22-year-old supervisor at Pinkbox Doughnuts downtown, told the Journal that his weekly credit-card tips dropped from between $175 and $200 to anywhere from $100 to $150.

With his $15-per-hour wage insufficient to cover basic expenses, Soto said: “I kinda rely on tips at the end of the day.”

The empty feeling is apparent on the usually buzzing Las Vegas Strip. Hotel occupancy rates have declined to approximately 66.7% in early July compared to the same period last year, according to the LVCVA.

“Vegas is not fun anymore,” Amrita Bhasin, a retail-industry entrepreneur, told MarketWatch.

She said that hotels in the city can charge as much as $50 in resort fees that make their stay even more expensive.

Rising prices affect both workers and tourists. Wally Weidner, a 67-year-old Wisconsin visitor, said he’s reconsidering his tipping practices.

“Just because prices went up doesn’t mean I should pay more tip,” Weidner said.
At Mon Ami Gabi restaurant on the Strip, a dinner-menu cheeseburger with fries now costs $30.95 plus tax and tip, compared to $16.95 four years ago.

Rory Kuykendall, a 41-year-old California native who moved to Las Vegas a decade ago, works as a graveyard-shift bellperson at the Flamingo hotel and casino.

Tips constitute 25% to 70% of his income depending on weekly business levels, according to the Journal.

Kuykendall described his recent tip income as “underwhelming” while facing increased costs for groceries and car insurance.


 
Las Vegas always was a honey trap in the form of a city, a scam because you could bet your entire life savings and even deeds that they wouldnt stop you but the moment you begin to win too many times in a row (not even due to illegal stuff but because of actual math probability, which is a real thing with savants) they unironically tell you to fuck off from their establishment and that you are "cheating them".

Its as corrupt and immoral as it comes and I feel no pity to see it go down as gambling is accessable by everything with a screen now (this isnt a GOOD thing as a whole but still).

The city deserves its fate.
 
Not surprised in the least. I went there last year for a concert, and I was absolutely floored by how expensive everything was. Breakfast alone cost like $50 a person, and dinner was like $100+ and the food wasn't even that good. That weekend cost me multiple thousands of dollars, and I didn't even gamble. When I got back, the boomers I know wouldn't believe me when I said Vegas was so ungodly expensive until I showed them my receipts.

If people aren't coming, you don't jack up prices to squeeze the remaining suckers. That's how you drive the rest away.
 
what incentive do people have to go hang out in 120 degree heat with homeless vagabonds and infested hookers with peeners?
Vegas bros and thots. That's about it. Mush headed 20's somethings with disposable incomes who romanticize what vegas was 40-50 years ago. That only pulls them once or twice into town and then I think even they're getting disillusioned with just how shitty of a place it is.
 
Maybe... just maybe... everybody except the ultra rich is getting poorer and they don't have money to waste anymore.
Just a thought.
It's not just that I think. People are growing wary of experiences like Las Vegas and others that don't provide much value and just make billionaires and mega hotel companies richer.
 
To me the biggest sign things were going to start tanking fast on the strip was around 2016 when MGM resorts went "lol now you have to pay to park" and then Caesar's Entertainment followed suit... and wouldn't you know it revenue started to decline. Then covid hit and online gambling popped up everywhere. Instead of actually trying to compete or roll back the fucktarded practices that are hurting them they're just doubling down (lol pun) and making it worse.

That being said the city itself isn't hurting that bad. Downtown still rocks and places like the Silverton are doing just fine and pulling a lot of business from the strip.

edit: spelling
 
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The article tries to blame Trump for scaring away foreign tourists, but the real reason is the casinos nickel and diming everyone for everything.

Vegas was unironically better when the mob still ran it. The casinos were the big money makers so there wasn't as much of a press to nickel and dime everyone on everything else. They still had to make money, yes, but there was never a need to make all the money forever at the cost of your clientele. You could spend a night out with friends during the peak of the Vegas comedy club scene for relatively cheap (depending on the talent) and still have money to gamble and drink for the night. You could also do so in relative safety because the mob didn't put up with trouble makers. Once the mob got ran out, everything from parking to hotels to ticket prices went through the roof and it turned into a shithole. Some friends and I made a trip out to Vegas a few years back to celebrate an investment windfall and it was so shit I doubt I'll be going back. The Americana spirit of the place really has been sucked completely dry.
 
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Vegas was unironically better when the mob still ran it.
Vegas used to have charmingly trashy lesser casinos on the strip (or just to the side). The old mob places that didn't get refurbished, and were filled to old alcoholics and weird locals. Those were great. I don't gamble, but the atmosphere was fun.

Now it's just overpriced corporate slop. Why bother.
 
The article tries to blame Trump for scaring away foreign tourists, but the real reason is the casinos nickel and diming everyone for everything.
No no no everything is Trump's fault except for anything good.
Two things - first, Las Vegas is a shit hole, so there's that. Always has been. But now that you can legally gamble in most states, including from the comfort of your own phone, what incentive do people have to go hang out in 120 degree heat with homeless vagabonds and infested hookers with peeners?
Casinos in Atlantic City fought to keep casinos out of other towns in NJ and probably in PA as well for a reason. Online gambling was always going to damage Las Vegas.
 
Once the mob got ran out, everything from parking to hotels to ticket prices went through the roof and it turned into a shithole.
Once again the mob is made to look like honest crooks who will bury you in a hole in the desert with no deceit in their heart, unlike politicians, taxmen, or corpo bastards.
 
Not surprised in the least. I went there last year for a concert, and I was absolutely floored by how expensive everything was. Breakfast alone cost like $50 a person, and dinner was like $100+ and the food wasn't even that good. That weekend cost me multiple thousands of dollars, and I didn't even gamble. When I got back, the boomers I know wouldn't believe me when I said Vegas was so ungodly expensive until I showed them my receipts.

If people aren't coming, you don't jack up prices to squeeze the remaining suckers. That's how you drive the rest away.
Well, then again the dollar has been inflated to half it's value in the last ten years, so when you really think about it that breakfast is actually just $25 but you aren't making the same amount anymore.
 
I was actually looking at Las Vegas hotels recently. Luxor was one of the choices because of its theme and iconic status as one of the fanciest and well known hotels in the world.

Then I watched a Youtube video where one entire side of the hotel was a giant Dorito ad (really makes you feel like you're in Egypt huh), and the Egyptian theme is now inconsistent because they decided to get rid of that theme but then changed their mind half-way.
I stayed at the Luxor last year during the Dorito ad phase. It's one of the cheapest hotels you can stay at in Vegas now. There is a Starbucks outside every elevator next to a mixed drink vendor that'll sell you a 20 dollar jungle juice in a giant foam container. Carrot Top performs nightly and there is inexplicably an exhibit on the Titanic that hasn't been changed for like twenty or thirty years.

Vegas is becoming more like a giant shopping mall and I don't like that change. I remember the good old days where there was a crips section and a bloods section of the Circus Circus in the 90's-2000's era, and that got sanded down to annoying people trying to sell you timeshares in lobby of the 2010's, to the weed boom where pot was decriminalized and every hotel started smelling like weed.
 
I was in Vegas a few months ago, and I had a good time despite the expense. That said, the best meal I had was in an arts district close to Old Vegas, and I was disappointed by the middling entertainment. I struggled to find shows worth seeing.
Specifically the number of highly viewed YouTube videos that show if you do card counting or actually win the casino will just throw you out.
I remember as a kid watching Rain Man and getting confused that they got in trouble for card counting. You get punished for being good at the game?

Although I've heard that the casinos have made the games even more disadvantageous to players by making the odds even more in the casinos' favor.
 
I remember as a kid watching Rain Man and getting confused that they got in trouble for card counting. You get punished for being good at the game?
Yes absolutely. Casinos will boot you if you turn out to be more of a cost than a profit. They absolutely defend this by saying gambling is entertainment or some such, and they don’t have to allow you to play if it isn’t in their favor. I think Ben Affleck got banned from several places for the same thing.
 
Yes absolutely. Casinos will boot you if you turn out to be more of a cost than a profit. They absolutely defend this by saying gambling is entertainment or some such, and they don’t have to allow you to play if it isn’t in their favor. I think Ben Affleck got banned from several places for the same thing.
Its basically the "we reserve the right to refuse service" catch-all. You can be chucked from any private business at any time for any reason not related to the big civil rights no-nos.

Being good at math is not a protected class, but, at least the worst they can do is throw you out.

Before there was caselaw that officially said using your brain on-the-fly to compute the odds was not cheating? The casinos used to confiscate your winnings too, as you'd "cheated" to get them. They can still turf you, but they have to pay you what you won before they pulled the plug.
 
Change all Blackjack to 6:5 and now nobody wants to play Blackjack? Somebody who is goood at economy please help.

A lot more places to gamble these days. Your phone, Indian casinos, a lot of states legalizing gambling and having their own casinos.

Sports media writer I follow says that New Orleans is a better gambling + food destination than Vegas nowadays.
 
The article tries to blame Trump for scaring away foreign tourists, but the real reason is the casinos nickel and diming everyone for everything.
After covid the casinos raised priced to recoup losses and switched tables with video poker. Heck going to a casino it used to be you planned on blowing a few hundred bucks for fun at the black jack table but now casinos are desperate to get those losses also with casinos they're not the bug money maker like it used to me.
 
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