BetMGM Casino Alberta went live on July 13 as Alberta’s regulated commercial iGaming market opened. The launch gives players a single login and one wallet across casino, sportsbook and poker, alongside a large game library and required responsible-gambling tools.
A For The Win report said the Alberta product is built on BetMGM’s Ontario platform and marks the operator’s first new iGaming jurisdiction in four years. It also said BetMGM is a joint venture of MGM Resorts International and Entain, has operated in Ontario since 2022 and now spans more than 20 regulated U.S. states. The same report said the brand won Online Casino of the Year in 2025.
The main catalogue figure is more than 4,000 games, which the report described as the largest confirmed library among day-one Alberta online casinos. Elsewhere in the article’s FAQ, the library was put at more than 9,500 games across slots, table games, live dealer and poker.
The Alberta build is designed to keep players inside one account rather than switching among separate products. Users do not need to log out to move between casino games, sportsbook betting and poker, and the poker section includes tables, tournaments and a shared player pool under the same product landing. The app is available on iOS and Android.
Banking options include Interac e-Transfer, Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and online banking. Minimum deposits and processing times follow AGLC requirements and are shown in-app at the cashier, while live chat, email and a help center carry over from BetMGM’s other regulated markets.
The launch sits inside a broader overhaul of Alberta’s online gambling rules. CBC reported that Bill 48, the iGaming Alberta Act, was passed last year to create oversight through the Alberta iGaming Corporation, and that Minister Dale Nally estimated 65% of online gambling in the province happened on black-market sites. Radar said Alberta became the second Canadian province to open its online gambling market to private operators, with nearly 50 licences in play and the province modelled on Ontario’s multi-operator system.
The same report said Alberta’s licensing framework requires deposit limits, loss limits, session controls, cool-off periods and self-exclusion. It also said the province’s centralized self-exclusion system, selfexclusion.ca, covers every licensed Alberta iGaming site with a single enrollment.



