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Gambling, & Poker News
Gambling, & Poker News
Alberta has now confirmed July 13 as the launch date for its regulated online gambling market, giving private sportsbook and casino operators a firm target to enter the province under a new licensing framework. Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction Minister Dale Nally shared the date in a letter to stakeholders, confirming what earlier regulator communications had already pointed to.
Good to Know
Nally told stakeholders that work still remains before the market opens, especially around contracts and launch readiness. According to the letter, Alberta iGaming Corp. is still working with operators on the draft operating agreement, with a finalized version expected by mid-April.
The Alberta Gaming, Liquor, and Cannabis Commission has also told interested operators they must stop any unregulated activity and pay licensing fees by July 13. Extensions of up to three months, through Oct. 13, may be available, but only for operators that can show a path to compliance that could not be reached before launch day.
The regulator also warned that ignoring that guidance could lead to a finding of unsuitability for iGaming registration in Alberta.
July 13 matters beyond Alberta alone. Ontario has been the only Canadian province with a multi-operator regulated online gambling model since 2022. Alberta will become the second, breaking away from the lottery monopoly approach still used across most of the country.
The province says the main goal is channelization. In plain terms, Alberta wants betting that already happens on offshore or other non-provincial sites to shift into a market the province can regulate and tax. Ontario has pushed a similar line, saying more than 80% of its online gambling activity now happens with provincially regulated operators.
Play Alberta is still the only provincially regulated site in the province today. Once the market opens, that changes fast. Major brands including bet365, DraftKings, and FanDuel are expected to join, and AGLC has said more than 50 operator sites have expressed interest.
Some brands are already moving early. Companies such as theScore Bet and Caesars have approval to begin pre-registering customers, although deposits and bets must wait until July 13.
The regulated market is set to launch on July 13.
Private sportsbook and online casino operators will be able to go live under Alberta regulation instead of Play Alberta being the only provincially regulated option.
The province wants to pull gambling activity away from grey and black market operators and bring it under provincial oversight and taxation.
AGLC has told operators to stop unregulated activity by July 13, though some may get extensions through Oct. 13 if they can show a credible path to compliance.
AGLC has said more than 50 operator sites have shown interest, with names such as bet365, DraftKings, FanDuel, theScore Bet, and Caesars already in the conversation.
The post Alberta Sets July 13 Launch for Regulated Online Gambling Market appeared first on iGaming.org.