Complete List of Land-Based Casinos in Canada: 124 Reviewed
A complete A-Z index of reviewed Canadian casino venues; use the main land-based hub for broader guides and city discovery.
This page is the CasinosInCanada master index for land-based casino review pages. It is built for players who already need the complete list: every reviewed Canadian venue in one A-Z directory, plus province groupings for quick local lookup.
Use the main land-based casino hub when you want broader discovery by city, popular venues, guides, news or methodology. Stay here when you want to open a specific casino review, verify which venues we currently track, or scan the full directory without extra hub content.
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Complete A-Z List of Land-Based Casinos in Canada
Looking for land-based casinos in Canada is not as simple as checking one national licence. Casino rules are set province by province, so legal age, regulator oversight, venue style and responsible-gambling support can change before you cross a provincial border.
This A-Z directory keeps the job narrow: find the reviewed venue page, confirm its province, then open the individual review for address, amenities, ratings and player feedback. Broader planning content lives on the main land-based casino hub and province guides.
A-Z Canadian Land-Based Casinos List
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How to Use This Canadian Casino Directory
Use this page as the direct route to reviewed Canadian casino venue pages. It is intentionally more index-like than the main hub, so the complete list stays easy to scan.
- Complete reviewed-venue index. The directory connects to active land-based casino reviews with venue details, ratings, player feedback and local travel context.
- Province grouping, not a city hub. The blocks below group casinos by recognised Canadian province or territory so city and service categories do not dilute the national list.
- Provincial casino regulation. Each province or territory controls licensing, oversight and responsible-gambling tools through its own regulator or lottery corporation.
- Updated venue status. Our editorial team refreshes the list when a casino opens, closes, rebrands, changes operator or receives a material review update.
The A-Z list is useful when you already know the casino name. If you are still choosing where to play, scan the province blocks below: they keep local regulation and 18+ or 19+ entry context together before you open an individual review.
Each casino link leads to a dedicated review page where available details can include the address, gaming floor notes, restaurants, hotel information, nearby accommodation, ratings and moderated player reviews. That keeps this page focused on complete-list lookup while the review pages and hub pages carry deeper trip-planning detail.
Casinos in Alberta
Alberta is one of Canada's 18+ casino provinces, so Calgary, Edmonton, Enoch, St. Albert and regional gaming centres can serve adult players from age 18. The market mixes resort casinos, racetrack casinos and community gaming rooms, with AGLC oversight shaping floor rules and responsible-gambling tools. This block is the Alberta slice of our complete casino-review directory; the full Casinos in Alberta guide adds broader province context, city notes and travel planning.
Casinos in British Columbia
British Columbia casino gaming is connected to BCLC and includes Lower Mainland properties, Vancouver Island casinos and regional destinations across the interior. Players must be 19 or older, and GameSense information is part of the regulated safer-play environment. The list below links to every BC land-based casino review currently tracked by CasinosInCanada; open the Casinos in British Columbia page for the wider province guide.
Casinos in Manitoba
Manitoba allows casino gaming from age 18 and combines Winnipeg venues with regional casinos serving smaller travel markets. Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries and local operating agreements shape the casino floor, self-exclusion tools and responsible-gambling messaging. This directory block keeps each Manitoba review one click away; the Casinos in Manitoba guide is the next step for licensing, city and travel context.
Casinos in New Brunswick
New Brunswick has a smaller land-based casino market, but its reviewed venues still matter for Atlantic Canada players and visitors planning a local trip. Casino entry is 19+, and the province sits within the broader Atlantic Lottery and provincial oversight environment. We keep the New Brunswick review links together here while Casinos in New Brunswick covers the province-level overview and trip-planning notes.
Casinos in Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia land-based casino gaming is concentrated around major Atlantic travel hubs, with 19+ entry and oversight tied to the Atlantic Canadian gaming framework. The market is smaller than Ontario, Quebec or BC, so individual venue details such as parking, restaurants and hotel proximity matter more. The links below point to every Nova Scotia casino review in our local directory; the full Casinos in Nova Scotia page adds province context.
Casinos in Ontario
Ontario has Canada's deepest land-based casino market, including resort casinos, racetrack casinos, urban gaming floors and major tourism destinations such as Niagara Falls and Windsor. Entry is 19+, with AGCO oversight and OLG PlaySmart safer-play context shaping licensed venues. This block is the complete Ontario review slice; start with Casinos in Ontario when you want the broader province guide before opening individual reviews.
Casinos in Prince Edward Island
Prince Edward Island is a compact 19+ casino market, so the value of a directory is clarity rather than volume. Casino trips often connect with Charlottetown, Summerside and seasonal travel planning, where hotel and dining details can matter as much as the gaming floor. This block links to every PEI land-based casino review we track; the Casinos in Prince Edward Island guide explains how PEI fits into Atlantic Canada casino travel.
Casinos in Quebec
Quebec is one of Canada's 18+ casino provinces and is anchored by Loto-Québec venues in Montreal, Quebec City, Charlevoix and regional resort markets. The province has a distinctive casino model, with government oversight, destination properties and French-English travel considerations. Use this list to open every Quebec land-based casino review; the complete Casinos in Quebec guide adds local rules and comparison notes.
Casinos in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan casino gaming is 19+ and includes a mix of city venues, regional properties and First Nations-linked gaming destinations. The province is less dense than Ontario or BC, which makes a clean venue-by-venue index useful for planning a real visit. Every Saskatchewan review we publish is linked below with city context where available; the Casinos in Saskatchewan page gives the wider province overview.
Casinos in Yukon
Yukon has a very small land-based casino footprint compared with the provinces, but players and visitors still need clear review links when planning a northern trip. Entry rules, operating hours, seasonality and travel logistics can be more important here than a long venue list. This block keeps our Yukon casino coverage visible inside the national directory. Use Casinos in Yukon for the territory-level guide and local context.
Official Canadian Casino & Safer-Play Sources
These links point to regulators, lottery corporations and safer-play resources used for province context. They are not casino operator links and they do not replace the individual CasinosInCanada venue reviews.
- AGLC Alberta gaming oversight and licensing context.
- BCLC British Columbia lottery and casino framework.
- GameSense Safer-play information used in BC and other Canadian markets.
- AGCO Ontario casino and gaming regulator context.
- OLG PlaySmart Ontario safer-play tools and player education.
- Loto-Québec Quebec casino and lottery corporation context.
- Atlantic Lottery Atlantic Canada lottery and gaming context.
- ConnexOntario Free, confidential Ontario support for gambling concerns.
Responsible Gambling at Land-Based Casinos — Stay In Control on the Gaming Floor
Brick-and-mortar casinos add three risks online play does not always mirror the same way — on-floor ATMs and cash cages make reloading instant, the social atmosphere, comps and alcohol service can stretch sessions longer than planned, and closing hours are the only natural stop unless you set one yourself. The CasinosInCanada team — led by Amanda Shimmer, Casino Expert & Chief Editor — checks Canadian casino floors and venue policies throughout the year, and the single biggest factor that separates a fun night out from a costly one is deciding your limit before you walk through the door. The three floor-specific safeguards below cost nothing and apply at every provincially licensed venue we cover on this hub.
Set a Cash-Only Trip Budget
Bring only what you can afford to lose and leave debit cards in the hotel or car. On-floor ATMs and cash-advance machines make it easy to exceed a limit once the floor energy picks up — a fixed bankroll removes that temptation.
Plan Your Stop Time
Decide a leave-by time before your first bet and treat it like a dinner reservation, not a suggestion. Unlike online play, a brick-and-mortar venue eventually closes — but only if you do not keep finding reasons to stay for one more round.
Get Real Help Early
A night out with friends can hide problem play until the drive home. Free, confidential 24/7 Canadian support is below — call before losses start to feel like something you have to win back tomorrow.
- Checked against Canadian gaming-floor evidence. Featured and priority venues are reviewed with on-site floor checks where practical, plus provincial licensing, table limits, amenities and player-facing service evidence — not republished operator brochures or third-party directory copy.
- We re-check every quarter. Renovations, new wings and operator changes happen often, so venue details, hours and ratings are re-verified every three months; a casino that no longer matches our field notes loses its strong rating the same cycle.
- Affiliate-proof ranking. Position is locked to the eight-step land-based scorecard in our methodology block above. Affiliate revenue cannot move a venue up the list — and it cannot prevent a fall.
- Player reviews over marketing claims. Venues with a pattern of unresolved player complaints or misleading floor information are downgraded quickly; serious issues are flagged in our player review section and removed from featured lists when the evidence supports it.
Reviewed and approved by Amanda Shimmer, Casino Expert & Chief Editor, CasinosInCanada.com. Amanda leads land-based casino coverage at CasinosInCanada — verifying regulator listings, comparing venue limits and amenities against player feedback, and coordinating field checks with Daniel Brooks and the wider editorial team where a physical visit is practical. Claims on this hub are checked against available venue visit notes, moderated land-based player reviews, our live player-complaints log and the eight-step review methodology detailed earlier on this page.
FAQ - List of Casinos in Canada
Yes. This page is the complete CasinosInCanada A-Z directory of active Canadian land-based casino review pages. It is built for fast lookup by casino name or province, while the main land-based casino hub is for broader discovery, city guides, articles and comparison context.
The counter comes from active land-based casino review pages in our Bitrix land-based casino catalogue. When a venue review is added, removed, unpublished or moved to a recognised province or territory, the national directory and province counts update from the same source.
Use this page when you need the complete list: every reviewed land-based casino, grouped alphabetically and by province. Use the main land-based casino page when you want a broader hub with city discovery, popular venues, news, methodology, history and guides before narrowing down to a specific review.
Canadian casino rules are provincial, so the minimum age, regulator, self-exclusion programme, alcohol rules and venue style can change by province. The province blocks help you open the right local review under the right regulatory context.
Most Canadian provinces require players to be 19 or older. Alberta, Manitoba and Quebec allow casino gambling from age 18. Every venue can ask for government-issued photo ID at entry, even if you are visiting from another province or country.
Where available, our land-based casino reviews include on-site hotels, nearby accommodation, restaurants, gaming-floor details, amenities and moderated player feedback. The goal is to help you plan a real visit, not just identify a casino name.
The land-based casino directory is reviewed quarterly and updated sooner when a casino opens, closes, rebrands, changes operator, moves province grouping or receives a major review update from our editorial team.