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Trust offices names in Alberta Canada

Checked on November 20, 2025
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Executive summary

Alberta maintains an official public list of loan and trust corporations registered to operate in the province, published by the Government of Alberta and updated as recently as August 2025 (the list notes specific entries such as Tetra Trust) [1]. For practical help on trusts (types, trustees, tax reporting) Alberta law firms, the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee, and the Law Society provide guidance and oversight; recent legal changes include a revised Trustee Act that came into force Feb. 1, 2023 and new federal T3 reporting rules requiring beneficial‑ownership details [2] [3] [4].

1. Where to find official names of “trust offices” in Alberta — the government list

If you are looking for the formal names of trust corporations authorised to operate in Alberta, the Government of Alberta publishes “List of loan and trust corporations registered to operate in Alberta,” described as a comprehensive, regularly updated catalogue (the document was updated in August 2025 with notes about specific companies) [1]. The publication explicitly lists registered loan and trust corporations and the jurisdiction responsible for incorporation, and the page points users to financial‑institutions.alberta.ca for further details [1].

2. What that government list is — and what it is not

The Alberta list is presented as a listing of registered loan and trust corporations but the dataset’s metadata warns it is “not the official register,” and it directs queries about missing names to Financial Institutions Policy by email [1]. That means the list is authoritative for registered operators but users with legal or transactional needs should validate entries through Alberta’s financial regulators or contact the government office cited on the page [1].

3. Types of “trust” entities you’ll encounter in Alberta

When people say “trust offices” they may mean different things: provincially‑registered loan and trust corporations (corporate trust companies), lawyers’ trust accounts used for client funds overseen by the Law Society of Alberta, or the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee that administers estates where no private trustee exists [1] [5] [6]. Each operates under different rules and is governed by separate oversight bodies — the provincial financial regulator for trust corporations, the Law Society for lawyers’ trust accounts, and the OPGT for public trusteeship [1] [5] [4].

4. Legal and reporting changes that affect trust names and disclosures

Two legal developments shape how trusts are identified and reported: Alberta’s revised Trustee Act (royal assent April 29, 2022; in force Feb. 1, 2023) modernised trust law and broadened the Act beyond testamentary trusts, making trust administration more efficient [2]. Separately, federal tax reporting rules now require trusts to disclose beneficial‑ownership information on T3 Schedule 15 — including names, addresses, dates of birth and tax numbers — increasing transparency about who ultimately benefits from a trust [3].

5. Private sector examples and market signals

Commercial market participants also register special‑purpose trust companies in Alberta; for example, Calgary fintech Balance registered a subsidiary, Balance Trust Company, as a special‑purpose trust under Alberta’s Loan and Trust Corporations Act, signalling Alberta’s role as a jurisdiction for trust‑company registrations in fintech custody and custodial services [7]. That demonstrates both the government’s active registry role and private firms’ use of Alberta’s framework for trust operations [7].

6. Practical next steps depending on your need

If you want an authoritative list of corporate trust names, download or consult the Alberta dataset “Loan and trust corporations registered to operate in Alberta” and follow the contact guidance on that page for missing entries [1]. If your question relates to lawyer trust accounts or trust accounting rules, consult the Law Society of Alberta’s Trust Safety resources [5]. If you’re dealing with public‑trust duties or need trustee services from the state, contact the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee [4].

Limitations and gaps: available sources do not mention a single consolidated directory called “trust offices” separate from the government’s loan and trust corporations list, and they do not provide a downloadable list of names in this summary beyond citing the Alberta dataset where those names appear [1]. For transaction‑level verification, contact Alberta Financial Institutions Policy or the specific regulator named on the government dataset [1].

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