Many workers claim that their occupation is higldy stressful, but rarely are data provided to back up this claim. Casino floor employees (those who work as dealers and slot machine attendants) are among those who say their occupations are highly stressful. To test this claim, the scores of 130 casino floor employees (76 men and 54 women; Ma,, = 33.3 yr., SD = 6.7 yr.) on the stress profile provided by Girdano and Everly (1979) were compared with the scores of 503 workers in other occupations (268 men and 235 women; M,,, = 39.4, SD = 10.7 yr.), all of whom had participated in training workshops on management of stress. The two groups did not differ in recent stressful life events (Ms 179.0 and 175.9; tG32 = 0.27): frustration level (Ms 26.2 and 25.9, t 634 = 0.64), lack of self-confidence (Ms 18.0 and 18.3, = 0.63, Type A behavior (Ms 24.2 and 24.5, t ~ 3 4 = 0.54), or anxious reactivity (Ms 23.3 and 23.4, $633 = 0.27). The casino employees had lower scores on work-overload (Ms 21.2 and 22.3, t034 = 2.35, two-tailed f = 0.02), lower boredom/loneliness scores (Ms 21.5 and 23.5, tC34 = 4.43, p < 0.001), and higher poor-nutrition scores (Ms 17.8 and 15.7, t 033 = 7.60, p < 0.001). However, all of the mean scores of both groups were in the normal range or below average on the norms provided by Girdano and Everly (1979). There was no evidence that casino floor employees are experiencing higher levels of stress than workers in other occupations.