The legal picture — and what to actually watch out for in 2026
Sweepstakes casinos have operated in Canada without regulatory action for over five years. There has been no AGCO enforcement, no BCLC cease-and-desist, no Loto-Quebec public warning, no CRA reassessment of prize taxation, no Competition Bureau intervention. The legal structure has been stable throughout that entire period. Nothing in the current legislative agenda in Ottawa or the provincial capitals suggests that will change in 2026 — but the model is not entirely without legal risk, and it is worth understanding where the risk actually sits.
The first risk is Ontario. In 2022 Ontario launched the AGCO-regulated iGaming market. That regime is now generating meaningful tax revenue for the province, and the sweepstakes vertical — which produces zero provincial tax — sits directly adjacent to it. It is not impossible that a future Ontario government or a future AGCO chair pushes for legislation that would restrict sweepstakes operators from taking Ontario players, or would require some form of registration. To date, there has been no formal signal that this is coming. We track this actively and would update this page if the legal position shifted.
The second risk is the AMOE narrowing. If a sweepstakes operator quietly restricts, throttles or refuses AMOE postcard entries, the entire legal argument collapses. Regulators or courts could reclassify the platform as an unlicensed gambling operation. This is why our editorial team has documented AMOE processing turnaround for each of our top-10 casinos — a platform that stops honouring the AMOE promptly is a red flag both for legal risk and for player trust. So far every casino on our list continues to honour AMOE as originally advertised, but this is the single mechanism most worth tracking.
What individual players should actually do
Nothing extraordinary. Play at operators that are established, honour AMOE, honour KYC, and pay redemptions on schedule. Our full Top 10 via legal ref is built to filter for exactly these attributes. Keep basic records of your annual redemption totals in case CRA ever asks — a screenshot of your PayPal transaction history is enough. Never treat sweepstakes play as a business unless you are prepared to defend that status to CRA, and never assume that provincial regulators will always be silent on the vertical: watch the news, adjust as needed. In practice, for the recreational Canadian player redeeming a few hundred CAD a month, the legal picture in 2026 is straightforward: it is legal, it is stable, it is not currently at risk. That is a defensible reading of the current landscape as we’ve documented it.
Continue with the How It Works via legal ref for the operational context that makes the legal argument work, or head to the Payouts via legal ref to understand the KYC and CRA-adjacent mechanics of actually cashing out your SC.
