By Alex Drummond, Editor-in-Chief · March 22, 2026
The Two Canadas of Online Poker
Alberta stands alone as the only Canadian province with a purpose-built regulated online poker market. Since April 2022, six poker brands have registered with Alberta iGaming Corporation and operate under AGLC oversight. Every other province relies on a mix of provincial lottery corporation sites and, for many players, offshore operators that lack Canadian regulatory oversight.
This creates a split experience for Canadian poker players. An Alberta resident plays in a ring-fenced, regulated environment with clear protections. A player in British Columbia, Alberta, or Quebec has access to global player pools on offshore sites but without the same regulatory safeguards.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Alberta | Rest of Canada |
|---|---|---|
| Regulation | AGLC + Alberta iGaming Corporation | Provincial lottery corps, minimal poker oversight |
| Licensed Poker Rooms | 6 (GGPoker, 888poker, BetMGM, PokerStars, PartyPoker, Bwin) | Provincial sites (PlayNow, Espacejeux), plus offshore access |
| Player Pool | Ring-fenced (Alberta only) | Global pools on offshore sites |
| Age Requirement | 18+ | 18+ or 19+ depending on province |
| Currency | CAD | CAD or USD depending on operator |
| Geolocation | Required (must be in Alberta) | Not enforced on offshore sites |
| Responsible Gambling Tools | Mandated by AGLC (deposit limits, self-exclusion) | Varies by operator, not always mandated |
| Dispute Resolution | AGLC complaint process | Limited or none for offshore operators |
| Deposit Protection | Player funds held per regulatory requirements | Depends on operator; no universal standard |
| Shared Liquidity Status | Court ruling in favor, Supreme Court appeal pending | Not applicable (already on global pools) |
| Marketing Rules | AGLC marketing standards (no inducement ads off-site) | No provincial framework for most |
Advantages of Alberta's Model
- Player protection. AGLC regulations require deposit limits, self-exclusion tools, reality checks, and AGLC Problem Gambling Resources integration. Offshore sites may offer some of these but are not required to.
- Dispute resolution. If a regulated Alberta room refuses to pay out or makes an error, you can escalate to AGLC. With offshore operators, you have no independent recourse.
- Game fairness. AGLC-regulated rooms must use approved random number generators and submit to compliance audits. Offshore rooms may be licensed in permissive jurisdictions with less oversight.
- Legal clarity. Playing on a regulated Alberta room is unambiguously legal. The legal status of playing on offshore sites from Canada is murky.
Advantages of Global Access
- Larger player pools. More players means more table selection, larger tournaments, and better game availability at all hours.
- Higher-stakes action. Global sites run higher-stakes games than Alberta's ring-fenced rooms consistently support.
- International tournaments. Access to the full WCOOP, SCOOP, WSOP Online, and other major online series with larger guarantees.
- More room options. Players outside Alberta can choose from dozens of poker operators rather than six.
What Shared Liquidity Would Change
If Alberta eventually enables shared liquidity, the gap between these two experiences narrows significantly. Alberta players would get the player protection benefits of regulation while also accessing larger player pools. The key advantages of playing on offshore sites (bigger tournaments, more traffic) would diminish or disappear, while the regulatory protections would remain unavailable elsewhere.
For a full timeline and analysis, see our Shared Liquidity Tracker.
GGPoker
4.7/5.0 · Feature-rich software, tournament festivals, Ontar
888poker
4.5/5.0 · Beginners, low-deposit players, freeroll seekers,
BetMGM Poker
4.4/5.0 · Rewards-focused players, bonus clearance calculato
PokerStars Alberta
4.4/5.0 · Tournament players, live event qualifiers, brand-t
Frequently Asked Questions
No. If you are physically in Alberta, you can only access the Alberta ring-fenced versions of regulated poker rooms. Your geolocation is checked, and global sites either block Alberta IPs or redirect you to their Alberta client.
The legality varies. Most provinces do not have an explicit regulatory framework like Alberta. Players in other provinces may access offshore sites, but these are not provincially regulated and lack the player protections that AGLC-regulated rooms provide.
Alberta has announced plans to launch a regulated iGaming market similar to Alberta's. Other provinces are watching Alberta's results but have not made public commitments to follow.
For recreational players, poker winnings are generally not taxable in Canada. For professional players who treat poker as a business, winnings may be taxable as business income. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.
Currently, Alberta players can enter WSOP Circuit events held on GGPoker's Alberta platform, but these are Alberta-only fields. Global WSOP Online events require access to the international player pool, which is not available under the ring-fenced model.