Las Vegas Sands has posted a new group of Dallas-based technology jobs. Some roles are tied to casino management systems, as the company keeps its Texas plans active despite the state’s ban on commercial casinos.
At least nine Dallas-based jobs were posted on Sands’ website in the past month. Openings are for application architects, data engineers, technology support staff and a senior product manager focused on casino management systems software.
The roles focus on casino tech
The job postings do not confirm a Texas casino project. They do show Sands building more technology capacity in North Texas while the political fight over casino gambling continues.
One listed role involves leading development of casino management systems software from the ground up. Other openings focus on data, application design and technical support, pointing to back-end systems work rather than resort staffing.
Sands already has a Dallas presence. The company hosted interns in Dallas and Las Vegas in 2025 across areas including global cybersecurity, server development, hardware development and game art and product design.
Texas remains closed to commercial casinos
Casino gambling remains illegal in Texas, and any full expansion would need a change in state law. Supporters have pushed for destination resort casinos and sports betting, but the Senate has continued to block the effort.
The latest political test did not move the issue much. Pro-gambling candidates made little progress in the 2026 Texas primaries, even as Sands said it would continue backing candidates who support destination resort casinos.
That leaves Sands hiring in a market where the company cannot yet operate a casino. The jobs may support corporate or product work that can be used in other markets, but their Dallas location keeps attention on the company’s long-running Texas strategy.
Mavericks deal keeps Dallas in focus
The Adelson and Dumont families bought a controlling stake in the Dallas Mavericks from Mark Cuban in a deal valued at about $3.5 billion in late 2023. Cuban kept a minority stake and control of basketball operations.
That purchase tied one of the world’s best-known casino families more closely to North Texas. It also kept speculation alive about future arena, entertainment and resort development around Dallas.
Sands has already tested local development interest in the region. In 2025, the company pulled the casino-style gaming component from an Irving proposal while saying the issue needed traction at the state level first.














