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Alberta Poker Shared Liquidity Tracker

Tracking the legal and regulatory path toward cross-border player pools for Alberta poker rooms.

By Alex Drummond, Editor-in-Chief · March 2026

The Current Situation

Since Alberta launched its regulated iGaming market on April 4, 2022, all six licensed poker rooms have operated with ring-fenced player pools. This means that when you sit at a cash table or enter a tournament on GGPoker, 888poker, BetMGM Poker, PokerStars Alberta, PartyPoker Alberta, or Bwin Alberta, you are only playing against other people physically located in Alberta.

Ring-fencing was a practical necessity at launch. Alberta built its market under provincial authority, and there was no legal framework to allow cross-border play. The result is a smaller player pool than what these operators offer in unregulated global markets, which affects tournament prize pools, table selection at higher stakes, and overall traffic at off-peak hours.

That may be changing. A series of legal decisions in 2025 opened the door to shared liquidity, though the path from legal permission to actual implementation remains long.

Timeline of Key Events

April 4, 2022Alberta opens its regulated iGaming market. Poker rooms launch with ring-fenced Alberta-only player pools. Six poker brands eventually register with Alberta iGaming Corporation.
2022 to 2024The Alberta poker market grows steadily. AGLC data shows poker wagers reaching roughly 1.7% of the province's total regulated iGaming handle. Players and operators begin advocating for cross-border play to increase pool sizes.
November 14, 2025The Alberta Court of Appeal rules 4-1 that Alberta can legally permit its regulated poker operators to share player pools with other jurisdictions. The court finds that cross-border play does not violate the Criminal Code provisions governing gaming.
December 26, 2025Three Canadian provincial lottery corporations (BCLC, Loto-Quebec, and ALC) file an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, arguing that the Court of Appeal overstepped in its interpretation of federal gaming law.
Early 2026The Supreme Court appeal is pending. No changes to Alberta's ring-fenced model are expected while the case is active. The court has not yet confirmed whether it will hear the appeal.
2026 (projected)Alberta announces plans to launch its own regulated iGaming market, modeled on Alberta's approach. If both provinces eventually allow shared liquidity, interprovincial pooling could precede any international agreements.

What Happens If the Appeal Fails

Even if the Supreme Court declines to hear the appeal or upholds the Court of Appeal decision, shared liquidity would not begin overnight. Alberta and Alberta iGaming Corporation would need to build a new regulatory framework covering several areas: which jurisdictions qualify as partners, what compliance standards operators must meet for cross-border play, how player protection rules apply across borders, and how tax and revenue-sharing arrangements work.

This framework would likely take at least a year to develop after a final ruling. Operators would then need to update their platforms, apply for any new approvals, and run testing periods before cross-border tables go live.

What It Means for Each Room

GGPoker

GGPoker operates the largest global online poker network by some traffic measures. Shared liquidity would allow Alberta players to rejoin GGPoker's worldwide tournament festivals, including WSOP Online bracelet events with larger fields and bigger guarantees. GGPoker's Alberta player pool would also benefit from increased cash game traffic, particularly at mid and high stakes where ring-fenced tables can be thin during off-peak hours.

PokerStars Alberta

PokerStars has the strongest brand recognition in global online poker. Reconnecting Alberta to the PokerStars international network would restore access to the full daily tournament schedule, major series like WCOOP and SCOOP, and the global Zoom fast-fold pool. For tournament-focused players, this would be the most significant change.

888poker

888poker operates in multiple regulated markets worldwide. Shared liquidity would boost cash game and tournament traffic for Alberta players. The room's BLAST jackpot format and freeroll schedule could also expand with a larger player base feeding the prize pools.

BetMGM Poker, PartyPoker, and Bwin

BetMGM Poker and PartyPoker both operate on the same software network. In the United States, BetMGM already participates in the Multi-State Internet Gaming Agreement (MSIGA), sharing player pools across New Jersey, Michigan, and other regulated states. If Alberta enables cross-border play, a natural path would be for BetMGM and PartyPoker to link Alberta into this US-based shared pool. Bwin, operated by the same entity as PartyPoker, would likely follow the same path.

Potential New Entrants

Some operators have indicated interest in entering the Alberta poker market specifically if shared liquidity becomes available. Larger player pools make the business case for launching in Alberta more attractive, which could mean more room choices for Alberta players in the future.

Alberta and Interprovincial Pooling

Alberta's plan to launch regulated iGaming in 2026 adds another dimension. If both Alberta and Alberta allow their regulated operators to share pools, interprovincial liquidity could become available without needing international agreements. This would be simpler from a regulatory standpoint since both provinces fall under the same federal gaming framework.

Interprovincial pooling would not match the traffic increase from connecting to global pools, but it would still increase field sizes and cash game options for players in both provinces. It could also serve as a test case for broader cross-border frameworks.

What This Means for Players

For now, nothing changes. Alberta's six poker rooms continue to operate with ring-fenced pools. The Supreme Court appeal could take months or longer to resolve, and implementation would follow on a separate timeline after that.

If you play regularly in Alberta, the practical impact of shared liquidity would be: more players at the tables, larger tournament guarantees, better game selection at higher stakes, and the ability to compete in the same events as players in other jurisdictions. For casual players, the day-to-day experience would feel similar but with slightly more table options.

We will update this page as the legal process moves forward.

Frequently Asked Questions

Shared liquidity means players in one regulated jurisdiction can sit at the same tables and enter the same tournaments as players in other jurisdictions. Right now Alberta poker rooms operate ring-fenced pools, meaning you only play against other players physically located in Alberta.

The Alberta Court of Appeal ruled 4-1 in November 2025 that Alberta can legally allow its players to compete internationally. However, three Canadian lottery corporations have appealed this decision to the Supreme Court of Canada. No changes are in effect while the appeal is pending.

There is no confirmed start date. Even if the Supreme Court upholds the Court of Appeal ruling, Alberta would still need to build a regulatory framework, designate partner jurisdictions, and create compliance rules. This process could take a year or more after a final ruling.

Rooms with large global player networks would benefit most. GGPoker and PokerStars both operate worldwide and could reconnect Alberta players to their international pools. BetMGM and PartyPoker could potentially share pools with US states through the Multi-State Internet Gaming Agreement (MSIGA).

Alberta has announced plans to launch a regulated iGaming market similar to Alberta's. If both provinces allow shared liquidity, Canadian interprovincial pooling could become an option before any international agreements are finalized.

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