Alberta has opened its doors to a competitive igaming market, registering 50 operators as the Canadian province moves to a licensed, multi-operator model for online gambling and sports betting. The launch positions Alberta alongside Ontario as one of the few Canadian provinces to embrace a competitive private-operator framework rather than relying solely on a government-run monopoly.
Alberta’s move follows years of anticipation after the province signaled its intent to modernize its gambling framework and allow licensed private operators to compete for market share, rather than restricting online wagering to a single provincial platform. With 50 operators now registered, the province has quickly built out a broad competitive field for its launch.
Following Ontario’s Blueprint
Alberta’s approach mirrors the framework Ontario established when it opened its own competitive igaming market, allowing licensed private operators — including major national and international sportsbook brands — to offer regulated sports betting and casino products directly to consumers. That model has been widely viewed as a success in Ontario, driving significant growth in registered play and tax revenue while curbing the flow of bettors to unregulated offshore platforms.
With 50 operators registered for launch, Alberta bettors will have considerably more choice in sportsbook apps and platforms than under the province’s previous government-controlled system, which offered a single monopoly option for online wagering.
What It Means for Bettors and Operators
For bettors, the expanded operator field should translate into more competitive promotions, improved product offerings, and better odds as sportsbooks compete for market share in the newly opened province. For operators, Alberta represents a meaningful growth opportunity as one of the larger Canadian provinces by population to open up to competitive licensing. The launch adds Alberta to a growing list of jurisdictions across North America embracing multi-operator sports betting frameworks rather than restrictive single-platform models.
Industry watchers will be tracking early registration and betting volume figures in the coming months to gauge how quickly Alberta bettors migrate from unregulated platforms to the newly licensed operators.
