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How Alberta iGaming Registration Works

Registration process guide

Alberta iGaming registration is a public sequence, not a single status word. The process moves through AGLC registration, due diligence, compliance preparation, centralized self-exclusion integration, AiGC commercial agreement work, transition-period limits and current availability checks.

This guide explains the whole sequence so readers can tell which public source answers each stage and which claims still need a current operator or market-launch check.

Last updated:

Verify the next step

Quick answer

Alberta's public process starts with AGLC registration. AGLC guidance describes a dual path: operators engage with AGLC first for regulatory registration and then with the Alberta iGaming Corporation (AiGC) for commercial agreement work. Government material adds an important player-facing boundary: during the registration process, operators may advertise and sign up prospective customers, but they cannot add funds to accounts or take bets.

The practical takeaway is this: listed by AGLC, commercial agreement, pre-registration and live real-money availability are separate checks. A reader should move through those checks in order before treating an Alberta operator as ready for account funding.

For players

Use registration information as the first checkpoint, then verify the brand-specific account path. If you see an Alberta ad, waitlist or signup page, match the legal name, check the status checker and read the operator's Alberta terms before adding money. During registration, public guidance allows advertising and prospective-customer signups, but not account funding or bets.

For operators

This page explains how public sources should be read. It is not private application advice. An AGLC registrants entry can support registry visibility; it should not be stretched into claims about private due-diligence findings, AiGC agreement terms, product readiness or launch timing unless a public source says so.

Alberta iGaming registration process at a glance

  1. AGLC registration starts the public regulatory path

    The operator or supplier begins the registration process, pays required fees and works through registration-class and document requirements.

  2. Due diligence and compliance readiness are reviewed

    AGLC material points applicants toward due diligence, compliance guidance, go-live preparation and notification requirements.

  3. Self-exclusion and supplier readiness must be addressed

    Suppliers may need registration, technology certification and integration with Alberta centralized self-exclusion where required.

  4. AiGC commercial agreement work follows the AGLC stage

    AiGC works with registered operators on the commercial agreement side of Alberta market participation.

  5. Transition-period advertising is limited

    Public guidance allows advertising and prospective-customer signups during registration, but not account funding or bets.

  6. Current availability is checked last

    The final reader question is whether Alberta-specific account terms, funding, wagering and safety controls are supported by current sources.

Step 1: AGLC registration and due diligence

AGLC is the regulator side of Alberta's iGaming model. Its application guide tells potential operators and suppliers to start with AGLC, where staff discuss the registration class, fee schedule and supporting documents. AGLC also describes due diligence as one part of its iGaming approach.

For readers, this is where the public registry trail matters. The current AGLC registrants source dated July 3, 2026 lists 49 iGaming operator-registration entries. That source can help connect a consumer brand to a legal or operating-as name, but it should not be read as a recommendation, review score or proof that a platform is already taking Alberta wagers.

Step 2: Compliance and go-live preparation

Registration is followed by compliance work. AGLC's iGaming page points applicants toward a go-live compliance guide, notification matrix, FAQ material and transition-period documentation. Its internet-gaming standards page also describes policy coverage for registered iGaming suppliers, including regulatory oversight, social responsibility, general standards and technology/security requirements.

This stage is why a public brand mention is not enough for a deposit decision. A brand can be visible in launch coverage, or even collect early interest, while Alberta-specific technology, terms, payments, identity checks and safer-gambling integrations are still being prepared.

Step 3: Centralized self-exclusion and supplier readiness

AGLC describes integration with the centralized Self-Exclusion Program as one of the operator process steps. It also says suppliers need to be registered with AGLC, have technology certified by an accredited testing facility and integrate with self-exclusion where required.

That makes self-exclusion part of the registration-to-live workflow, not a separate afterthought. A reader checking a real-money site should be able to find account limits, time-outs and self-exclusion routes before funding an account. For the standalone consumer guide, see self-exclusion in Alberta.

Step 4: AiGC commercial agreement

AiGC is the commercial side of the Alberta model. AGLC's guidance says that once an applicant completes AGLC registration, AiGC works with the operator to complete a commercial agreement. AiGC's operator page also points already registered operators toward applying for an AiGC operator agreement.

This creates a practical split in public status language. AGLC registration can be visible before a public source confirms the AiGC commercial agreement stage. A page should not imply that a commercial agreement exists for a specific operator unless a current public source supports that claim. For the body-specific explanation, read what AiGC does in Alberta iGaming.

Step 5: Transition-period advertising and pre-registration

Alberta government guidance allows operators in the registration process to advertise and sign up prospective customers. The same guidance sets a bright line: those operators cannot add funds to accounts or take bets during that transition stage.

This is where many reader misunderstandings start. A coming-soon page, waitlist, email signup or early account flow can be useful launch evidence. If it starts to look like a money-handling or wagering path, compare it with the pre-registration guide before relying on it.

Step 6: Launch notification and live-status verification

The Government of Alberta phase 3 fact sheet describes three milestones before funds and bets can begin: registration and due diligence with AGLC, a commercial agreement with AiGC, and market-launch notification by AiGC. AiGC's operator page says the approved-operator list will be released on July 13, 2026, coinciding with the official launch of Alberta's iGaming market.

For readers, this is where the process becomes brand-specific. Before funding an account, verify Alberta-specific terms, identity and geolocation steps, deposit and withdrawal rules, responsible-gambling tools and the current source date behind the status label. The current launch-date explainer covers the July 13 date in more detail.

What each public source can tell you

Public source Process stage it helps verify What it confirms What it leaves open
AGLC application guide Regulatory registration and AGLC/AiGC sequence. AGLC is the starting point and AiGC commercial agreement work follows the AGLC stage. A specific operator's private due-diligence outcome or current account availability.
AGLC registrants PDF Registry-name and legal-entity visibility. A legal or operating-as name appears in the dated registration source. Consumer recommendation, deposits, wagers or completed AiGC agreement status.
AGLC standards page Compliance, social responsibility and technology/security context. Internet-gaming standards exist for registered iGaming suppliers. Whether a particular operator's Alberta product, payment flow or support route is available.
Government iGaming strategy Market policy and transition-period limits. Registration-stage advertising and signups are allowed, while account funding and bets are not. Which brands have finished every later launch milestone.
Government phase 3 fact sheet Milestones before funds and bets. AGLC registration/due diligence, AiGC commercial agreement and launch notification are key milestones. A final per-operator consumer status page.
AiGC operators page Commercial agreement and approved-operator list timing. AiGC points registered operators to the operator agreement path and says approved operators will be released on July 13, 2026. Pre-July-13 approved-operator names or current status for every AGLC-listed entry.

Decision flow: from registry line to account decision

Use this order when a brand appears in an ad, search result, pre-registration page or registry line.

  1. Is the legal or operating-as name visible in the current AGLC source? If no, use the operator-registration check guide and be cautious about Alberta claims.
  2. Does a public source confirm the next stage? AGLC listing alone does not tell you whether AiGC agreement work is complete.
  3. Is the brand only collecting interest? If the source shows signup or coming-soon language, read it as pre-registration unless funds or wagers are clearly supported by current Alberta evidence.
  4. Can you verify a live Alberta account flow? Look for Alberta-specific terms, geolocation, identity checks, deposits, withdrawals, limits and support routes before money is involved.
  5. Has the source trail changed recently? Check the registry change log, status checker and operator profile before relying on an older screenshot or article.

Worked example: a listed operator still in process

Imagine a consumer brand appears in the current AGLC registrants PDF through a legal entity line. That can justify the label "Listed by AGLC" in a status table. It does not answer the next questions by itself.

The reader still needs to ask whether a public source confirms AiGC agreement status, whether the operator is only collecting pre-registration interest, whether the Alberta account flow accepts deposits and wagers, and whether the safer-gambling and complaint routes are visible before signup. Until those later checks are supported, the consumer answer should stay cautious: the registry line is real, but the account decision is not finished.

That distinction is not a technicality. It prevents a registry line from being turned into an account-funding recommendation. It also gives the operator room to move through the Alberta process without readers assuming every product, payment method or bonus term is already available.

Source limitations

Public sources do not reveal private due-diligence findings, private agreement terms, exact review timing, internal compliance discussions, payment readiness or the operator's final launch checklist. They also may not show whether every related brand, app or product type is available at the same time.

This site fills part of that gap by separating registration status, launch signals and live availability in the status checker and operators hub. Those tools still depend on public evidence, so current operator pages should be rechecked when a regulator, AiGC or operator source changes.

Where to verify the current status

FAQ

Can I deposit during Alberta iGaming registration?

No. Alberta public guidance says operators in the registration process may advertise and sign up prospective customers, but account funding and bets require later milestones, including AGLC registration and due diligence, an AiGC commercial agreement and market-launch notification.

Does AGLC-listed mean legal to play?

Not by itself. An AGLC registrants entry is a registry checkpoint for a legal or operating-as name. A player still needs to check whether the brand is available for Alberta real-money use and whether the account terms, payments and safer-gambling tools are Alberta-specific.

Who approves Alberta iGaming operators?

Public sources split the process. AGLC handles regulatory registration, due diligence, standards and compliance context. AiGC handles the commercial operator-agreement side and says it will release the approved-operator list at launch.

When is the approved-operator list released?

AiGC says the approved-operator list will be released on July 13, 2026, coinciding with the official launch of Alberta's iGaming market. Before that list is public, the AGLC registrants PDF should be read as a registration source, not the final approved-operator list.

What should I check before funding an account?

Match the brand to the legal or operating-as name, check the current operator status, read Alberta-specific account terms, confirm age and geolocation steps, review deposit and withdrawal rules, and find limits, time-outs and self-exclusion routes before adding money.

Sources and update log

This page uses official Alberta, AGLC and AiGC sources first. It does not use industry reporting to prove registration, commercial agreement status or live availability.

  • July 10, 2026: Reviewed against the current AGLC registrants PDF dated July 3, 2026 and kept registration, transition-period and live-status boundaries separate.
  • 2026-06-03: AGLC, Alberta government and AiGC process sources rechecked for registration, transition-period and live-status boundaries.
  • July 3, 2026: Current AGLC registrants source records 49 iGaming operator-registration entries.