Digital Gaming Dominates As OLG Releases 2024–25 Annual Report

Posted on: March 11, 2026, 09:45h. 

Last updated on: March 11, 2026, 09:45h.

  • Record revenues for digital gaming division, including iLottery, iCasino and iSports
  • Digital gaming does well amid competitive environment in Ontario
  • OLG launched new Proline+ sportsbook platform with Kambi in January

Digital gaming was the dominant narrative as the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) reported an increase in proceeds in that line of business for the 2024-25 fiscal year.

Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) announces financial results for 2024-25 fiscal year.

$9.3 Billion in Total Proceeds

It’s tough to compare the crown corporation OLG results with what is going in Ontario’s private regulated market, where we have financial results released by iGaming Ontario through this past January. The OLG 2024-25 fiscal year ended March 31, 2025. OLG also factors iLottery in its digital gaming category, which the private sector does not.

Overall, total proceeds for OLG’s retail lottery, land-based gaming and digital gaming lines of business were $9.30 billion CAD for fiscal 2024-25 (down from $9.32 billion in 2023-24). Lottery was $4.149 billion, down from $4.221 billion in 2023-24, and land-based gaming was $4.278 billion, down from $4.353 billion the previous year.

Competitive Market

Digital gaming, though, via olg.ca, where one can access online casino games like slots, table games like blackjack and baccarat, live deal games and jackpots, as well as iLottery, saw a jump – $882 million in proceeds, from $750 million in 2023-24. Proline+ is their sports betting site, with props, spreads, live bets, and same-game parlays, and is part of digital gaming as well.

As we reported, in an interview with Kambi Group Chief Commercial Officer Sarah Robertson earlier this month, OLG launched its new Proline+ sportsbook platform in partnership with Kambi in January, to make it more competitive with private sector sportsbook operators like DraftKings, FanDuel, and BetMGM in Ontario. We’ll see if that move gives them a bigger chunk of the overall Ontario igaming market.

Kambi Partnership

Duncan Hannay, President and CEO of OLG, in a statement in the report, pointed to the net profit to the province after allocations from digital gaming – a record $378 million, up from $292 million in FY 2023-24. Monthly average active player accounts that fiscal year rose 19%.

Hannay referenced new product and improvements in speed to market in his statement, including “Arcade” – a new iCasino category that offers players a range of Crash, Tap and Game Show games, which launched in June 2024, as a driver there.

Digital Casino Impacting Land-Based Casino

Competition from the private sector is fierce in Ontario – currently at 49 licensed operators and 82 igaming websites, according to iGaming Ontario, which conducts and manages private sector gaming in the province. In 2025, the Ontario private market generated just over $98 billion in handle, $4 billion in operators’ combined NAGGR.

Interesting – land-based casino proceeds saw a 3% year-over-year decrease to $3.82 billion, “primarily a result of lower spend per casino patron resulting from continued unfavourable economic conditions affecting consumer discretionary spending and increased competition from online digital casino gaming competitors.”