
Single-event sports betting is legal in Nova Scotia. After Bill C-218 changed federal law in August 2021, Nova Scotia enabled betting on a single game or event. This explainer covers what is legal today, who runs it, the legal age, how to bet, and how winnings are taxed.
Nova Scotia sports betting at a glance
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Online sports betting | Legal – via ALC Proline (monopoly) |
| Retail sports betting | Legal (ALC retail + casinos) |
| Single-event legal | Single-event added Feb 2022 |
| Regulator | Atlantic Lottery Corporation (ALC) |
| Market model | Provincial monopoly |
| Legal online operator(s) | Atlantic Lottery’s Proline (alc.ca) |
| Minimum age | 19 |
| Winnings taxed? | No – recreational winnings are tax-free |
Legal sports betting in Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia uses a provincial model run through the Atlantic Lottery Corporation (ALC). ALC’s Proline, available at alc.ca, is the legal online option. Nova Scotia also has casinos in Halifax and Sydney and offers retail Proline betting.
Legal status and key dates
Single-event sports betting became legal across Canada on 27 August 2021, when Bill C-218 amended the Criminal Code. Nova Scotia added single-event sports betting in February 2022, slightly later than the other Atlantic provinces. Betting is run through the Atlantic Lottery Corporation (ALC), the Crown body for the four Atlantic provinces.
How to bet legally in Nova Scotia
- Use a legal option – Atlantic Lottery’s Proline.
- Be 19 or older (the legal gambling age in Nova Scotia).
- Create an account and verify your identity.
- Deposit with Interac, the most common Canadian method.
- Place your bet.
Are gambling winnings taxed in Nova Scotia?
No. In Canada, recreational gambling winnings are not treated as taxable income, so you keep what you win. The only exception is the rare case of someone who gambles professionally as a business. This is a federal rule, so it applies in Nova Scotia as it does across Canada.
Responsible gambling in Nova Scotia
You must be 19 or older to bet in Nova Scotia. Free, confidential support is available through ALC’s GameSense responsible-gambling support at 1-855-291-2920, and every regulated site offers deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion.
FAQs
Yes. Single-event sports betting is legal in Nova Scotia, offered through Atlantic Lottery’s Proline.
19. You must be 19 or older to bet in Nova Scotia.
The legal option is Atlantic Lottery’s Proline. Sites operating outside provincial regulation offer weaker player protection.
No – recreational winnings are tax-free in Canada. Only professional gamblers, a rare business-like case, may be taxed.
For the national picture, see is sports betting legal in Canada?, or our guide to the best betting sites in Canada.
19+ in Nova Scotia. Please play responsibly. Help is available through ALC’s GameSense responsible-gambling support at 1-855-291-2920.