Soft2Bet is lining up for Alberta’s regulated online gaming launch, hoping to bring its ToonieBet playbook west if the province opens the door.
Alberta Is Becoming the Table Everyone Wants a Seat At
Soft2Bet has confirmed it is looking at Alberta as its next Canadian growth market, with plans to enter once the province’s regulated iGaming framework is live and the needed approvals are in place.
The company is leaning on experience from Ontario, where its ToonieBet brand gave it a local foothold and a test case for how it wants to operate in Canada. That same approach now looks set to travel west.
Why Alberta Has Operators Paying Attention
There is a reason Alberta keeps coming up in boardrooms. Industry estimates suggest the province could grow into a regulated market worth more than $700 million a year once it matures, which would make it one of the biggest opportunities in the region.
Soft2Bet is far from alone in spotting the opening. DraftKings, theScore, NorthStar Bets, PointsBet Canada, BetMGM, Betway, and Bet99 are all among the names linked with interest in the province.
The appeal is not hard to see. Alberta has the youngest adult population in Canada, the highest GDP per capita, and strong population growth driven by both migration from other provinces and immigration from abroad. By late 2025, the province’s population had passed five million, with a median age of 38.1. Forecasts point to another two million residents over the next 27 years.
That matters for operators because a younger, growing population gives the market more room to run. It also matters for players, since a bigger market usually leads to a wider mix of betting products, casino games, and loyalty offers once competition begins.
The Rules Are Still Taking Shape
Alberta is building its model around two main bodies. The Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis agency will act as regulator, while the Alberta iGaming Corporation will oversee operations and manage the market.
Those pieces are being built through the iGaming Alberta Act, which sets the framework for licensing, compliance, and oversight. Until that structure is fully in place, operators are stuck in preparation mode rather than launch mode.
Soft2Bet says it is “closely monitoring” those developments and getting its systems ready to meet local technical and regulatory standards. In plain terms, it wants to be ready when Alberta flips the switch.
The province has already put some early revenue expectations on the table. Estimates suggest the Alberta iGaming Corporation could generate about $75 million for the province in fiscal 2026-27, rising to roughly $109 million by 2028-29.
ToonieBet Could Be the Blueprint
Soft2Bet’s Alberta ambitions are expected to run through ToonieBet, the Ontario-facing brand it launched toward the end of 2024.
The company says its model is built around localization, which in this case means adjusting products to local culture, player habits, and regulatory demands rather than dropping the same template into every market and hoping for the best.
That can cover everything from language support and promotions to game mix and user experience. It is the kind of detail that players rarely think about until they notice a site feels built for someone else.
David Yatom Hay, Soft2Bet’s general counsel, said the company wants to deliver “localised, engaging experiences” that reflect the preferences and culture of each market, pending regulatory approval.
That is the sales pitch, and it is a sensible one. Alberta players are unlikely to care much about corporate expansion maps. They will care whether the app works smoothly, the offers feel relevant, and the product does not feel like a recycled import.
Soft2Bet Is Not Waiting Around Elsewhere
While Alberta remains a future play, Soft2Bet is still adding pieces in other markets.
The company has launched Lodur in Sweden, a Viking-themed online casino and sportsbook brand that adds a progression system where players build and upgrade settlements as they play.
Yoel Zuckerberg, Soft2Bet’s chief product officer, said Lodur shows how the company’s Mega product suite can be used to blend social mechanics with player-versus-player progression. The idea is to keep players returning without cluttering the core gameplay loop.
That Swedish launch does not change the Alberta timeline, but it does show Soft2Bet is still pushing on product while it waits for Canada’s next opening.
Alberta’s Starting Gun Has Not Fired Yet
Soft2Bet’s Alberta move is still a plan, not a launch. The province’s market is not open, and every operator on the sidelines is waiting for the same thing: a clear framework, live licensing, and a date that turns talk into action.
Still, the message is clear enough. Alberta is shaping up as Canada’s next iGaming battleground, and Soft2Bet wants in early.










