Alberta’s online casino and sports betting shake-up is set to give players more legal options while sending fresh revenue into provincial coffers.
Private Operators Get The Green Light
Alberta will open its regulated online gambling market on July 13, giving private operators a legal route into the province for the first time. The new system will sit alongside PlayAlberta, the province’s existing government-run iGaming site.
The province expects the launch to generate around C$76 million in its first year, according to Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally. That is not sofa-change money, though Nally has framed the move less as a cash grab and more as a way to drag online gambling into a regulated lane.
For players, the change should mean a much broader menu of casino and sportsbook brands. The first wave reportedly includes 51 approved brands, with names such as BetMGM, DraftKings, FanDuel, bet365 and CasinoDays among those preparing to go live.
Player Protection Takes Center Stage
Alberta’s pitch is simple: people are already gambling online, so the province would rather supervise the action than pretend the internet has an off switch.
Under the new model, operators will contribute 1% of gross gaming revenue to responsible gambling programs, including problem gambling treatment. Another 2% will go toward First Nations communities, while the province will keep 20% of net gaming revenue. Operators are expected to receive the remaining 80%.
A centralized self-exclusion system is also part of the package, allowing players to block themselves across licensed platforms instead of playing whack-a-mole with individual accounts. Alberta is also putting limits on advertising, a welcome move for anyone already tired of sportsbook ads shouting at them during every timeout.
The Grey Market Problem
The launch is aimed squarely at offshore and grey-market sites that have been taking Alberta bets without contributing to provincial oversight or gambling harm programs.
Dale Nally said around 70% of Alberta’s online gambling activity had been going through those unregulated or loosely regulated channels. The province wants those players using licensed platforms where age checks, consumer rules and safer gambling tools are baked into the system.
That matters for the average online casino player. A bigger legal market does not magically make gambling risk-free, but it can make the basics less murky: clearer rules, approved operators, local oversight and one place to go when something goes wrong.
Ontario Offers The Comparison
Alberta will become Canada’s second province to allow private-sector iGaming operators, following Ontario’s 2022 launch. Ontario generated about C$87 million in its first year, giving Alberta a useful benchmark as it tries to build a market of its own.
The Alberta model will also be watched closely by other Canadian provinces. If the launch pulls players away from grey-market sites without unleashing a marketing free-for-all, it could become a template for the next wave of regulated online casino expansion in Canada.
For now, players in Alberta are getting what many have already been using, only with a provincial stamp on the door. More choice is coming. So are more rules. In online gambling, that trade-off may be exactly the point.













