Alberta Sets Strict Sports Betting Ad Rules Before July Launch

Alberta will open its regulated iGaming market on July 13, but private sportsbook and casino operators will not get a free run at public bonus advertising.


Good to know

  • Alberta will ban public ads for gambling inducements, bonuses and credits unless they appear inside an operator app, site or opted in direct marketing.
  • Active and retired athletes can appear only in responsible gambling campaigns.
  • The Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission had 46 registered iGaming operators as of June 19.

Bonus Ads Stay Off Billboards

Sportsbook operators entering Alberta will need to keep free bet offers, deposit matches and similar promos away from broad public advertising.

A June 18 update to Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission standards confirmed that ads for “gambling inducements, bonuses and credits” cannot run publicly. Operators can show them on their own app or website, or send them through direct marketing to players who have opted in.

That means Alberta bettors should not expect Calgary or Edmonton billboards built around bonus offers once the competitive market opens.

The rules also ban ads that target minors, mislead customers or “promote excessive play.” For operators, the message is clear enough. Alberta wants a private online gambling market, but it also wants the advertising guardrails in place from day one.

Alberta Follows Ontario But Adds Its Own Detail

Alberta has borrowed much of the framework used in Ontario, which launched Canada first competitive iGaming market in 2022. Ontario later tightened advertising rules after heavy bonus marketing and celebrity led campaigns became a concern.

Alberta starts closer to that stricter model. Operators cannot use cartoons, influencers or celebrities who would likely appeal to minors. Active or retired athletes can appear only when the campaign promotes responsible gambling.

The AGLC also gives promotions a separate section in the standards. Promotions cover activity designed to attract players or keep them active, outside regular advertising. That includes contests, draws, prizes and giveaways.

The regulator bars promotions tied to illegal activity, promotions that require a separate gaming licence and offers that increase a player odds of winning. The AGLC can also order an operator to adjust or end a promotion to protect social responsibility or gaming integrity.

That extra control matters because bonus abuse, misleading offers and youth appeal have become regular pressure points in regulated sports betting markets across North America.

Operators Face Partner Checks Too

Licensed Alberta iGaming operators will also carry responsibility for their advertising partners. The standards require operators to make sure partners do not run similar marketing activity for unlicensed gambling sites.

Compliance failures can bring fines or loss of registration.

Registration alone will not be enough to launch. Operators also need a signed contract with the government owned Alberta iGaming Corp. Once both pieces are in place, sportsbooks and online casino brands can enter Alberta regulated market from July 13.

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