Gaming Floors Ready
Before the Next Rush.
Autonomous floor scrubbers for casinos, casino hotels, sportsbooks, and entertainment complexes. Keep high-traffic hard floors consistently clean without depending on overtime-heavy overnight labor.
Built for 24/7 facilities, security-conscious operations, and multi-property groups that need documented execution, not just promises.
Why casinos look at automation
The floor never really closes, but labor still does.
Casinos live in the gap between guest-facing presentation standards and the reality of staffing a 24/7 operation. That is exactly where autonomous floor cleaning starts to make financial sense.
Overnight staffing pressure
Late-night EVS coverage is expensive, hard to retain, and still inconsistent across a full gaming floor.
Visible labor cost
Casinos feel every extra overnight hour because cleaning must happen without disrupting the guest experience or gaming revenue.
Security-sensitive environment
Routes, access points, and staff workflows need to respect surveillance, cash-handling, and operational controls.
Short reset windows
Ballrooms, sportsbooks, food zones, and gaming aisles need to be ready again before the next traffic wave arrives.
Best fit properties
Where casino and gaming robots fit best
Not every gaming environment is identical. The strongest fits are properties with large hard-floor circulation space, repeatable overnight routes, and clear ownership of floor care standards.
Destination casinos
Large concourses, long gaming aisles, restaurants, and event zones create enough recurring floor area to justify dedicated automation.
Casino hotels and resorts
You get value on both sides of the property, gaming-floor public space plus hotel corridors and event areas.
Regional gaming properties
Often a strong fit with one versatile robot focused on the highest-labor public zones first.
Entertainment complexes
Sportsbooks, concert venues, and food halls benefit from fast turnaround after events and late-night traffic.
Multi-property operators
RFM makes standardization and visibility possible across multiple facilities without relying on manual reporting.
Dense legacy layouts
Older floors with tight slot banks can still work, but usually need route-by-route evaluation and partial manual coverage.
Zone-by-zone fit
Where robots work in a casino, and where your EVS team still wins
A good deployment is honest. Robots handle repeatable hard-floor routes. Your staff stays focused on detail cleaning, spill response, restrooms, and tight areas around active guests and furniture.
Honest limitation
If your floor plan depends on extremely tight aisles, constant chair movement, or high-density obstacles all night, automation should be scoped narrowly. A partial-fit deployment is still valuable, but only if the route design is realistic.
Overnight strategy
Use the overnight window without building your whole staffing model around it
Casino operations rarely have a true shutdown, but they do have lower-traffic windows. The goal is not to clean everything at once. The goal is to automate the repeatable routes that should happen every night, every property, every time.
The operational win
Casinos do not need robots because people disappear completely. They need robots because the overnight team should spend less time pushing a scrubber and more time on spills, detail work, and security-coordinated cleaning tasks.
That is where deployments usually stick, when automation removes the repetitive floor route and leaves judgment-based work with the team.
Security coordination matters
Casino deployments should always account for surveillance sightlines, controlled access, cage-adjacent routes, incident response expectations, and housekeeping communication. We scope those considerations into the rollout instead of treating them as an afterthought.
Compliance and controls
Documented cleaning helps operations, vendors, and property leadership stay aligned
Casinos may not share the exact regulatory structure of healthcare or food production, but they do care deeply about documented standards, vendor accountability, incident review, and brand protection. RFM gives operations leaders proof that routes ran and exceptions were visible.
What leadership sees with RFM
Properties rely on verbal updates, shift notes, or vendor claims. It is hard to know whether high-visibility routes were actually completed consistently.
Property leaders can see cleaning completion, route history, exceptions, and fleet status without waiting for a manual summary from every site.
For multi-property operators, this is often the difference between a pilot and a scalable program.
Robot selection
Choose the robot based on route shape, not just square footage
Casino properties usually need one of two strategies: a versatile robot for mixed public-space routes, or a large-format robot dedicated to the main floor and concourses, sometimes paired with a smaller unit for hotel or secondary zones.
CenoBots L3
$24,000 MSRPCompact footprint for narrower routes and secondary zones.
CenoBots L4
$35,833 MSRPMost versatile single-robot fit for many casino properties.
CenoBots L50
$41,820 MSRPBest fit when overnight coverage and square footage are the core problem.
CenoBots SP50
$32,667 MSRPSweeper option for dry debris before or alongside scrubbing routes.
CFO-ready ROI model
A realistic model for one 140,000 sq ft casino resort
Here is the kind of math casino operators actually care about: what recurring overnight labor can we replace or reassign, and how fast does that justify the investment?
Illustrative financial view
That payback can improve if you are currently covering those routes with overtime, agency labor, multiple partial shifts, or higher local wage pressure. If you prefer operating expense, we can also scope the same outcome under RaaS.
What makes the model real
We do not assume robots replace an entire EVS team. The model works when you target repeatable floor routes first, preserve manual coverage for detailed tasks, and quantify savings from labor reallocation, overtime reduction, or avoided backfill.
Multi-property operations
Standardize cleaning performance across the whole portfolio
For casino groups, one property pilot is only step one. The bigger upside is repeatable operating standards across multiple sites without depending on every property to report manually in the same way.
RFM lets regional leaders compare fleet status, route completion, and exceptions across properties while on-site teams keep control of daily execution. That makes it easier to justify expansion when one site proves the model.
Multi-site benefits with RFM
FAQ
Common questions from casino operators
Can cleaning robots run safely in an active casino?
Yes, with the right deployment plan. We typically schedule routine runs overnight or in sectional windows when foot traffic is lower. The robots use obstacle avoidance and can work around people, but casinos get the best results when routes are mapped to avoid peak congestion and security-sensitive moments.
Will a robot fit between slot banks and table-game layouts?
Sometimes. Wider open aisles are a strong fit, but very dense slot layouts or tightly packed table clusters may still require manual cleaning. During the site assessment we identify which aisles are good robot candidates and which ones stay with EVS staff.
How quiet are the robots overnight?
They are designed for commercial environments and are commonly deployed in hospitality settings overnight. Casino hotels and guest-facing spaces usually schedule runs during lower-traffic windows so floors are ready before morning without adding a full night-shift labor burden.
Can we manage robots across multiple casino properties?
Yes. Robot Fleet Management (RFM) gives regional operators a centralized view of maps, schedules, cleaning completion, uptime, and alerts across multiple properties. Local teams run the robots, while corporate operations gets documented visibility across the fleet.
Do you provide documented cleaning logs?
Yes. Every run can be tracked with date, time, route, duration, and completion data. That helps with internal standards, vendor accountability, and showing that overnight and routine floor care actually happened as scheduled.
What does a typical casino deployment look like?
Most deployments start with one or two robots focused on the highest-labor hard-floor zones first, usually concourses, gaming floor aisles, hotel corridors, or event space. Once the team sees results, many operators expand to adjacent zones or other properties.
See what a casino deployment would actually look like.
We will map your highest-value zones, flag the areas that should stay manual, and show you a practical rollout plan with either CapEx or RaaS.