LAS VEGAS — Less than a year after its grand opening, the Fontainebleau Las Vegas — a long-awaited $3.7 billion luxury resort on the north end of the Strip — is facing a string of financial and operational challenges that raise questions about its long-term viability.
Amid soaring operational costs, ongoing executive turnover, and a shadowy regulatory investigation, the resort is reportedly hemorrhaging cash while scrambling to refinance nearly a billion dollars in debt.
A Costly Comeback
The Fontainebleau brand, once synonymous with Miami glamour, reemerged in Las Vegas after years of development stalls. The project finally opened its doors on December 13, 2023, backed by Fontainebleau Development and Koch Real Estate Investments.
Yet despite its grandeur — including 3,644 rooms, 36 restaurants, a 173,000-square-foot casino, and high-end entertainment venues like LIV and BleauLive — insiders say the property is struggling to achieve profitability.
According to sources familiar with internal financials, the resort was burning up to $400,000 per day in the early months following its opening.
Layoffs & Leadership Exodus
In May 2025, Fontainebleau laid off over 60 table-game dealers, signaling broader cost-cutting measures as management attempts to stabilize the resort’s balance sheet.
The layoffs follow a series of high-level executive departures, including the Chief Financial Officer, Chief Technology Officer, and Director of Beverage Development. According to industry insiders, these exits point to a pattern of instability at the top and growing concerns about the resort’s strategic direction.

Regulatory Turbulence
Compounding the internal strife is a federal investigation into potential violations of anti-money laundering protocols.
According to documents disclosed — accidentally — by the Nevada Gaming Control Board, Fontainebleau is accused of issuing casino credit to patrons without completing the required compliance checks. The investigation, which began shortly after the resort’s opening, remains ongoing.
Chasing Liquidity
To ease its mounting financial pressure, the resort’s ownership is seeking a $975 million CMBS refinancing, hoping to restructure its capital stack and reduce interest burdens.
Meanwhile, Fontainebleau Development recently purchased an adjacent plot of land for $112.5 million, fueling speculation that the company may be planning a future expansion — despite not having turned the corner on profitability with its current operations.
A Critical Inflection Point
While Fontainebleau Las Vegas remains open and operational, analysts say the resort is at a critical financial juncture.
With competition from well-established resorts like Wynn, Resorts World, and Caesars, Fontainebleau’s path forward likely hinges on resolving regulatory threats, rebuilding its executive team, and securing more favorable loan terms.
What was once billed as a rebirth of luxury in Las Vegas now risks becoming another cautionary tale of Strip overreach.
“Vegas is unforgiving,” said one hospitality executive on background. “There’s no nostalgia for the past — only the numbers that show up in the books.”
Whether Fontainebleau can rewrite its financial story remains to be seen.
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