Coronavirus: Macau casinos reopen for masked punters after two-week virus suspension
- All staff and visitors to the gambling hub’s casinos will have to wear masks at the tables
- The local gaming regulator has imposed strict rules for casinos including temperature checks

Casinos in Macau, the world’s biggest gambling hub, reopen on Thursday after being closed for two weeks because of the coronavirus epidemic, but all punters and croupiers will have to wear a mask at the tables.
Casino executives and residents say revenue will remain badly crimped in the Chinese territory’s 41 casinos and the businesses dependent on them because of the health restrictions and strict entry regulations on tourists.
Macau makes over 80 per cent of its revenues from casinos but tourist visits have all but dried up.
Authorities said last week the city was receiving around 2,000 daily visitors, a drop of around 98 per cent year on year. The government has suspended an individual travel scheme through which visitors from the mainland gain entry and curtailed transport, including the cancellation of ferry services from neighbouring Hong Kong.
The former Portuguese territory’s over 600,000 people are also mostly staying at home.
