SeaTac’s Silver Dollar Casino is cashing out for good, as Maverick Gaming shuts down the neighborhood card room on International Boulevard near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in the latest turn of its long-running financial unwind.
The closure, part of Maverick’s Chapter 11 reorganization, was first reported by the Puget Sound Business Journal. That reporting places the SeaTac shutdown alongside a broader series of cuts, sales and asset auctions tied to the company’s restructuring in Washington.
Bankruptcy and earlier shutdowns
RunItOneTime LLC, the parent company behind Maverick, filed for Chapter 11 in mid-2025 as debt pressures mounted, according to industry coverage. Maverick’s own Washington web page documented an earlier slate of closures, while trade reporting tracked the company’s efforts to sell or shutter underperforming cardrooms. Yogonet outlines the filings and the follow-on asset moves.
State licensing snapshot
Public records from the Washington State Gambling Commission list Silver Dollar Casino/SeaTac among licensed and operating properties in the commission’s public packets, with a license expiration date of June 30, 2026. That official listing offers a snapshot of the property’s regulatory status even as ownership and operating plans shift during the bankruptcy process. The most recent entries appear in Washington State Gambling Commission documents.
Local jobs and ripple effects
When Maverick closed several Washington cardrooms last summer, local reporting documented immediate job losses and vendor disruptions around the Puget Sound region. SeaTac’s Silver Dollar drew both airport travelers and neighborhood regulars, so its shutdown could echo for employees and nearby businesses that rely on daytime and evening foot traffic. Earlier impacts from the company’s pullback were covered by MyEdmonds News.
Who might step in next
Some Maverick assets were auctioned during the Chapter 11 process, and an entity tied to founder Eric Persson emerged as a successful bidder for a subset of the company’s cardrooms last year. Any new buyer for the SeaTac site would need state gambling regulators to sign off, along with likely approval from the bankruptcy court, so would-be operators are watching court dockets and commission filings closely. Bloomberg Law reported on the auction activity linked to the case…