Alberta is opening the online gambling floodgates

Alberta is looking to follow Ontario’s lead in turning profits from illegal online gambling into a billion-dollar revenue stream.

Driving the news: Alberta will become the second province to let private online gambling sites, like FanDuel and DraftKings, legally operate in exchange for a cut of their revenues. Last year, Ontario raked in $2.4 billion in gaming revenue thanks to a similar model.

  • Before Ontario opened up its gambling market, ~70% of the $1 billion Ontarians wagered was on the so-called grey market of unregulated sites. A year after making the move, 85% of Ontario bettors started making their picks on legal platforms.
  • The province takes a healthy 20% cut of those betting sites’ revenues. The total payout has skyrocketed as wagers in Ontario hit $63 billion last year, up 78% from 2022.

Why it matters: Open betting markets have been a catalyst for financial hardship, especially among younger men and lower-income households. A recent study in the US found regions with legalized sports betting also have lower credit scores, and more bankruptcies and debt.

Bottom line: Despite most provinces keeping the doors closed to private online betting sites, almost half of Canadians are already active online gamblers.


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