Atlantic Access

 is a Canadian publicly funded educational cable television network serving the region. It is owned by the Atlantic Access Corporation, a Crown corporation owned by the provincial governments of, , and. The network is headquartered in.

Atlantic Access receives funding from the Atlantic Canada provinces' governments as well as public donations. All pay television (cable, satellite, IPTV) providers throughout Atlantic Canada are required to carry Atlantic Access on their basic tier, and programming can be streamed for free online.

Overview
The founder of was Matthew Martirosyan, a  journalist. He stated in a 2011 interview that the idea of Atlantic Access was to allow people to "see the Atlantic provinces as they truly are."

The proposed Atlantic educational cable network began taking shape in 1992 in a meeting of ministers of the provincial governments of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland in Matthew's adopted hometown of. On May 13, 1995, Atlantic Access signed-on for the first time from it's original studio in Halifax.

In its programming, Atlantic Access covers a range of topics including politics, history and culture, arts and music, health, parenting, and science. It has a children's block, AA+!, produced out of the network's Halifax, and  studios.

Atlantic Access formerly had a sister network, AA2 (formerly known as Maritimes Public Access), from 2000-2011, which was sold to in 2012 and became a regional affiliate of their  system as Omni Maritimes.