Alberta’s Betting Market Opens With Integrity Oversight Built In
Just weeks before Alberta opens its regulated online gambling market, the province has approved the International Betting Integrity Association as an official integrity monitor, giving the organisation a direct role in overseeing suspicious wagering activity from the first day sportsbooks go live.
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The approval means operators entering Alberta’s market on July 13 will have access to IBIA’s monitoring and alert systems as part of the province’s broader compliance structure. The group confirmed it will work alongside the Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis Commission to flag unusual betting patterns and escalate concerns tied to potential match manipulation or betting fraud.
The timing matters. Alberta’s launch is shaping up to be one of the biggest expansions of regulated online betting in Canada since Ontario opened its own market in 2022. Around 30 sportsbook and casino operators are expected to enter the province immediately, creating an intensely competitive environment where customer acquisition pressure will be high from the outset.
That lineup includes major brands already familiar to Canadian bettors, among them FanDuel, DraftKings, BetRivers, Betway and theScore, alongside the province-run Play Alberta platform.
Integrity systems arrive before the market fully opens
IBIA framed Alberta’s approach as a model for newly regulated markets, pointing to mandatory operator obligations and structured information sharing between regulators and integrity bodies. The organisation has been pushing that framework globally as governments continue opening legal betting markets while trying to limit manipulation risks tied to rapidly expanding online wagering.
Central to Alberta’s setup will be IBIA’s Monitoring & Alert Platform, known internally as MAP, which tracks betting activity across multiple sports and operators to identify anomalies that may indicate suspicious conduct. Alerts can then be shared with regulators, sportsbooks, sports governing bodies and law enforcement where appropriate.
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The move also deepens IBIA’s foothold in North America. The organisation already operates in Ontario, but Alberta’s entry strengthens its position in a region that has become increasingly significant in global integrity monitoring.
According to IBIA’s 2026 integrity data, North America accounted for 20% of all suspicious betting alerts recorded by the organisation, second only to Europe’s 28%. Tennis and mixed martial arts generated the highest number of alerts across the continent, reflecting patterns the industry has been watching for several years as lower-tier tennis events and combat sports continue attracting scrutiny from integrity analysts.
Globally, IBIA recorded 70 suspicious betting alerts during the first quarter of 2026 spanning 10 different sports. Football produced the highest number with 25 alerts, followed by tennis with 16 and esports with 15.
The organisation did not disclose how many alerts specifically originated from Canadian betting activity.
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