Notifications

Keeping Alberta Affordable: Eligible seniors and families with children under 18 can apply for $600 affordability payments. Learn more and apply now

Current situation

All remaining mandatory public health restrictions were lifted on June 14 as the Omicron BA.2 wave subsides and COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to decline.

Translated resources

COVID-19 resources are available in عربي, 中文, हिंदी, 한국어, فارسی, ਪੰਜਾਬੀ, Af-Soomaali, Español, Français, Tagalog, Tiếng Việt and اردو on alberta.ca/CovidTranslated.

Cases in Alberta

  • 629,648 Total cases
  • 388 Cases reported over 7 days
  • 9,998,877 Vaccine doses as of March 13
  • 486 In hospital
  • 11 In intensive care*
  • 5,619 Deaths

Updated March 15. Numbers are current as of end-of-day March 13. Case numbers are updated every Wednesday.
*ICU cases are a subset of those in hospital.

Information for Albertans

All Albertans 6 months+ can get vaccinated. Bivalent vaccine boosters for Albertans 5 years+ are available now.
Public health measures are being lifted in 3 steps. Alberta entered Step 3 on June 14, 2022.
COVID-19 PCR testing is available to Albertans with clinical risk factors for severe outcomes and those who live and work in high-risk settings.
Mandatory isolation requirements were lifted on June 14, 2022. Isolation is still recommended if you test positive or have symptoms not related to a pre-existing illness or health condition.

Prevent the spread

  • Get vaccinated to prevent COVID-19

    • COVID-19 vaccines are safe and help prevent you from getting infected and protect you from getting severely sick if you do get it.
    • Albertans 6 months and older can get vaccinated now.
    • Bivalent vaccine boosters for Albertans 5 years and older are available now. The bivalent vaccine triggers a stronger immune response and provides additional protection against both Omicron and the original SARS-CoV-2 virus strain.
    • Working Albertans can access 3 hours of paid, job-protected leave to get each dose of the vaccine.

    Learn more: Vaccines, boosters and records with QR codes

  • Get vaccinated to prevent Influenza

    Why get an influenza vaccine

    An influenza vaccine (flu shot) won’t prevent COVID-19 but it will reduce your chances of getting sick with influenza (flu) or spreading it to others.

    All Albertans 6 months and older are encouraged to get an influenza vaccine. It’s especially important for seniors, pregnant women, Indigenous Peoples and people with chronic health conditions as they have a higher risk of severe complications.

    By keeping influenza counts low, we can:

    • help prevent people from being infected with COVID-19 and influenza at the same time
    • make sure our health-care system has capacity to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic
    • let health-care workers focus on treating people with other illnesses and injuries
    • reduce outbreaks in care facilities

    The vaccine is available free of charge starting October 18.

    Where to get an influenza vaccine

    • Alberta Health Services (AHS) public health clinics/sites for individuals 6 months to 4 years (and their families).
    • Some doctors’ offices for individuals 6 months old and older.
    • Participating pharmacies if 5 years old or older.

    How to book

    Book online (pharmacy is recommended or AHS clinic) 

    • Many pharmacies are also accepting walk-in appointments. If your local pharmacy is not listed in the booking system, contact them directly or find a pharmacy near you.
    • Some community medical clinics are also offering influenza vaccine and can be contacted directly.
    • COVID-19 boosters will be offered with each influenza vaccine appointment. A separate COVID-19 appointment is not needed.
    • Arrive as close to the appointment time as you can.
    • Stay home if you have symptoms of COVID-19
    • Staff and volunteers at clinics and venues offering influenza immunization must follow their employers' policies for COVID-19 and may include requiring you to wear a mask.
  • Monitor your symptoms

    Stay home if sick

    • COVID-19 symptoms are similar to influenza and other respiratory illnesses and can range from mild to severe. Even people with mild symptoms can spread COVID-19 to others.
    • It is recommended to isolate if you test positive or have symptoms not related to a pre-existing condition.

    Practice good hygiene

    • In addition to getting vaccinated and staying home when sick, practicing good hygiene habits can protect you and those around you from spreading COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses:
      • stay home if you are feeling sick
      • wash or sanitize your hands often
      • cover your coughs and sneezes
      • avoid touching your face
  • Isolate when sick

    It is recommended to isolate if you test positive or have symptoms not related to a pre-existing condition.

  • How it spreads

    COVID-19 is transmitted though tiny droplets of liquid produced by people who have the virus. The virus spreads by:

    • breathing in air that contains infected droplets from people coughing, sneezing, talking, laughing, and singing
    • touching objects or surfaces the virus has landed on and then touching your eyes, nose or mouth (bath towels, kitchen utensils, door knobs, etc.)

    People who have COVID-19 can spread it to others before they start to feel sick.

    COVID-19 does not appear to regularly transmit like measles through long-range transmission, but there are circumstances that raise the risk of aerosol transmission, such as crowded or poorly ventilated indoor spaces where people are engaging in activities like singing or high intensity exercise. Individuals and businesses should apply mitigation strategies where these risks exist.

    We think the virus generally only survives for a few hours on a surface or object, but it may be possible for it to survive several days under some conditions.

  • Variants of concern

    Variants of concern may spread more easily, cause more severe illness, require different treatments, affect the reliability of diagnostic tests, or have reduced vaccine effectiveness.

    Alberta is monitoring for variants of concern. The B.1.1.529 (Omicron) variant is the dominant strain in our province.

    Symptoms in variant cases are so far reported to be the same as the original virus, including cough, fever, shortness of breath, runny nose, and sore throat.

    Learn more about COVID-19 variants

Get help

News

Was this page helpful?

All fields are required unless otherwise indicated.

Your submissions are monitored by our web team and are used to help improve the experience on Alberta.ca.