• About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Typhoon Tapah disrupts Macau casino operators’ non-gaming services and transportation links
Ad image
  • About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Typhoon Tapah disrupts Macau casino operators’ non-gaming services and transportation links
Ad image
Search
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
GGRAsia > Newsletter > Newsletter 3 > Typhoon Tapah disrupts Macau casino operators’ non-gaming services and transportation links
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 3

Typhoon Tapah disrupts Macau casino operators’ non-gaming services and transportation links

Newsdesk Published September 8, 2025
Share
3 Min Read

Tourism and general travel to Macau, along with some non-gaming services at the city’s casino resorts, were disrupted by the passage of a typhoon with the moniker “Tapah”.

General disruption began for air and sea transport a number of hours before a Typhoon Signal No.8 was hoisted at 9pm on Sunday (September 7), with air services in particular still facing issues even after the alert was lowered to Signal No.3 at 3pm on Monday.

According to GGRAsia’s checks, all the casino resorts in the city’s Cotai district and on Macau peninsula announced some form of suspension to elements of their non-gaming services for periods after the Signal No.8 went up, with the suspensions ending after the Signal No.3 was hoisted on Monday. Paused services included some restaurants, shops and outdoor facilities, as well as free shuttle bus services.

One outlet at the Inner Harbour district – an area prone to flooding – of the Mocha Clubs Macau chain of slot clubs run by Melco Resorts & Entertainment Ltd was closed for the same period, commonly a precaution taken at that venue during typhoons. The information was confirmed by Macau’s casino regulator, the Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau.

Earlier this month, brokerage Seaport Research Partners noted that its estimate of 13-perecent growth in September’s Macau casino gross gaming revenue “could be negatively impacted if any typhoons in the area impact travel into Macau.”

“Last year, September was negatively impacted by two major typhoons, somewhat offset by high VIP hold,” said senior analyst Vitaly Umansky in a note last week.

Due to the typhoon, Macau International Airport saw an aggregate of 91 flights – inbound and outbound – cancelled on Sunday and Monday, 41 of which were to or from mainland China. Other cancellations involved flights scheduled to destinations in Taiwan, Southeast Asia and Northeast Asia.

Ferry services between Macau and Shenzhen – a mainland China city adjacent to Hong Kong – were suspended throughout most of Sunday and the whole of Monday, according to information from Macau’s Marine and Water Bureau.

Ferries between Macau and Hong Kong were suspended from Sunday evening and resumed on Monday afternoon once Signal No.3 came into force in both cities.

Cross-border tourist coach services between Macau and Hong Kong via the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge were also disrupted during the passage of Typhoon Tapah, resuming on Monday afternoon as the alert was lowered to Signal No.3.

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

GKL reports US$28mln in casino sales for May, up 41pct from a year ago
June 4, 2026
Pagcor chief says Philippine GGR could fall by as much as 19pct this year: reports
June 4, 2026
S.Korea, China to boost mutual air-traffic rights in first easing for seven years: reports
June 4, 2026

Most Popular

HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 1

Sands China hires ex-MGM China exec Hubert Wang as COO

May 29, 2026
HeadlinesJapanLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Potential MGM Resorts buyout could trigger review of Macau, Japan assets: analysts

June 3, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Macau’s May GGR above expectations but negatively impacted by low hold: Seaport

June 2, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 3

Challenging for Macau to get significant per-capita increase in non-gaming spending: CreditSights

May 29, 2026

Code of Ethics

Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Contact Us

Follow US
Copyright 2026 TEAM Publishing and Consultancy Ltd / All rights reserved
Sign up to our FREE Newsletter

Subscribe now and never miss our latest news!

Zero spam, unsubscribe at any time.