● Live Wisconsin AG suit vs Kalshi & Polymarket pending · NY/IL insider-trading orders in effect · Updated May 2026
● Updated May 2026

The global guide to
prediction markets

From Kalshi's CFTC-regulated event contracts to Polymarket's on-chain liquidity and Manifold's play-money community. We track every major operator, how they're regulated, and how they actually work, across 32 markets worldwide.

$10B+
2025 Volume
4
Major Operators
32
Markets
100%
Independent

What is a prediction market?


A prediction market is an online platform where people bet real money on the outcome of a future event with a binary, yes-or-no answer that resolves by a specific date: an election, a central bank rate decision, an Oscar winner, whether a stock index closes above a given level, whether a team wins a tournament. The mechanism is a financial instrument called an event contract, which has a nominal value (typically $1) and pays out in full to whoever held the correct side when the event resolves.

A worked example: imagine an event contract on whether the S&P 500 will close above 7,000 by year-end. If you buy 1,000 YES contracts at $0.25 each and the index does close above that level, you collect $1 per contract, turning $250 into $1,000. If you're wrong, the contracts pay zero and you lose your $250. The price you pay is, in effect, the market's current estimate of how likely the event is.

How pricing actually works


Price = probability

YES + NO = $1

YES and NO shares always sum to roughly $1, because anyone holding one of each is guaranteed exactly $1 at resolution. A YES share at $0.62 means the market puts the odds at about 62%.

Liquidity

Orderbook vs AMM

Kalshi and Polymarket use orderbooks where limit orders match when prices cross. Older on-chain venues use automated market makers, smart-contract liquidity pools that always quote a price, even in thin markets.

Resolution

Settling the market

Winning shares pay $1, losing shares pay zero. Resolution can be handled by a centralized operator, a decentralized oracle like UMA, or a community vote, depending on the venue.

Types of prediction markets


Not all prediction markets work the same way. They differ along three main axes, how the question is structured, how liquidity is provided, and whether real money is at stake.

Question structure

Binary vs scalar vs categorical

Binary markets have two outcomes (YES/NO) and are by far the most common. Categorical markets have multiple mutually exclusive outcomes (e.g. which party wins an election). Scalar markets let traders bet on a numerical range, will GDP growth land between 2.0% and 2.5%?, and pay out proportionally.

Liquidity model

Orderbook vs AMM

Orderbook venues like Kalshi and Polymarket match buyers and sellers via limit orders: tight spreads in liquid markets, nothing quoted in dead ones. Automated market makers (AMMs) use smart-contract liquidity pools that always quote a price, making them better for long-tail questions but worse for large trades.

Money at stake

Real-money vs play-money

Real-money venues (Kalshi, Polymarket, ForecastEx) use actual USD or stablecoins and face the most regulation. Play-money platforms (Manifold's mana, Iowa Electronic Markets' $500 cap, Hollywood Stock Exchange) operate outside gambling law but attract real forecasters who care about their track record.

Settlement layer

Centralized vs on-chain

Centralized exchanges hold USD at a regulated custodian, settle in fiat, and resolve markets by operator decision. On-chain venues settle in stablecoins, resolve via decentralized oracles like UMA, and are accessible globally via a wallet, at the cost of adding crypto custody risk.

A short history of prediction markets


Modern prediction markets trace back to the Iowa Electronic Markets, launched at the University of Iowa in 1988 as a research project that has consistently outperformed major election polls. Online play-money markets like Hollywood Stock Exchange followed in the 1990s. Intrade, an Irish real-money exchange, became famous in the 2000s for forecasting US elections before shutting down in 2013. Kalshi launched in 2021 as the first fully regulated event-contract exchange in the US, and Polymarket, built on Polygon and settled in USDC, emerged as the dominant on-chain venue worldwide, processing billions of dollars in volume around the 2024 US election. In October 2025, Intercontinental Exchange (the company that owns the New York Stock Exchange) announced an investment of up to $2 billion in Polymarket, signaling that prediction markets have moved firmly into the financial mainstream.

Major operators worldwide


The four platforms that define the modern global prediction market landscape. Each takes a fundamentally different approach to settlement, regulation, and liquidity.

Crypto / On-chain

Polymarket

Founded 2020 · New York, USA

USDC-settled on Polygon. Largest prediction market by volume.

  • Deepest liquidity
  • Broad market coverage
  • On-chain settlement
CFTC-regulated

Kalshi

Founded 2021 · New York, USA

First fully CFTC-regulated US event-contract exchange.

  • Fully regulated in US
  • Bank-grade compliance
  • Economics & weather contracts
Play-money

Manifold Markets

Founded 2022 · San Francisco, USA

Free play-money social prediction platform with user-created markets.

  • Free to use
  • User-created markets
  • Forecaster community
Academic / Research

PredictIt

Founded 2014 · Wellington, New Zealand (Victoria University of Wellington)

Longest-running US political prediction market. $850 contract cap per market.

  • Longest track record
  • Political market depth
  • Low barrier to entry
CFTC-Regulated Exchange

ForecastEx

Founded 2023 · Wilmington, Delaware, USA

CFTC-regulated event contracts embedded in major brokerages. No separate account required.

  • Access via existing brokerage
  • Fully CFTC-regulated
  • No extra KYC step
Broker (Embedded Contracts)

Robinhood

Founded 2013 · Menlo Park, California, USA

Consumer brokerage offering embedded event contracts. Fastest-growing retail prediction market platform in the US.

  • Fastest retail PM growth, 12B+ contracts in 2025
  • Simple mobile UX, no separate account needed
  • Sports + political + economic contracts in 35+ states
Broker (Embedded Contracts)

Interactive Brokers

Founded 1977 · Greenwich, Connecticut, USA

Institutional-grade brokerage with ForecastEx political, economic, and financial event contracts.

  • Institutional-grade platform
  • Deep market data tools
  • ForecastEx integration
Broker (Embedded Contracts)

Webull

Founded 2017 · New York, USA

Commission-free brokerage with embedded Kalshi economic and financial event contracts.

  • Commission-free
  • Kalshi integration
  • Strong charting tools
Crypto / On-chain

Drift Bet

Founded 2022 · Decentralized (Solana)

Solana-based prediction market. Politics, economics, sports, and crypto. No KYC required.

  • Low Solana transaction fees
  • No KYC required
  • Broad category coverage
Sweepstakes / Parlay

Verse

Founded 2023 · United States

Sports, politics, and pop culture parlay-style predictions. Relaunched as Verse Picks (Sep 2025) with YES/NO + multi-leg parlays.

  • Available in most US states
  • No deposit required
  • Sports, politics and pop culture parlays
Academic / Research

Iowa Electronic Markets

Founded 1988 · Iowa City, Iowa, USA

University of Iowa research market. US politics only. Oldest continuously operating real-money prediction market.

  • Founded 1988, longest track record
  • Consistently beats major polls
  • University-backed credibility
Sports Exchange

Novig

Founded 2022 · United States

Peer-to-peer sports exchange. Commission-free orderbook model, no bookmaker vig built into odds.

  • Commission-free P2P trading, no vig
  • Applied for CFTC DCM licence (50-state coverage)
  • Sharp-bettor friendly orderbook model
Sports Prediction Exchange

ProphetX

Founded 2023 · United States

Sports prediction exchange using a limit-order model. Sharp-bettor and market-maker friendly.

  • Exchange model, no vig
  • Orderbook trading for sports
  • Competitive odds via market makers
Crypto Exchange + Prediction Markets

Crypto.com

Founded 2016 · Singapore (US operations via licensed subsidiary)

Prediction markets via derivatives subsidiary, politics, economics, sports, and financial markets.

  • Large existing crypto user base
  • Multiple market categories
  • Established regulated entity
Crypto Exchange (Event Contracts)

Coinbase

Founded 2012 · San Francisco, California, USA

Event contracts for US users via Coinbase platform, settled in USDC on Base L2.

  • Most trusted US crypto brand
  • Regulated US entity
  • USDC settlement on Base
Pick'em / Prediction Market

PrizePicks Predict

Founded 2018 · Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Sports pick'em prediction market. Real-money payouts on over/under athlete and event predictions.

  • Available in most US states
  • Simple over/under format
  • Large community of sports fans
Esports Prediction Market

OG.com

Founded 2023 · Global (esports focus)

Esports and gaming-focused prediction market backed by the OG esports organization.

  • Esports community integration
  • Gaming-native user base
  • Backed by top esports brand
Media-integrated

Myriad Markets

Founded 2024 · Global

Prediction markets embedded into publisher and media experiences. Trust Wallet integration, USD1 stablecoin settlement.

  • Publisher partnerships
  • Gamified UX
  • Multi-chain + Trust Wallet integration

What people actually trade


Politics

Elections & policy

Presidential winners, parliamentary majorities, cabinet picks, court rulings, foreign election outcomes: politics has historically been the largest category by volume.

Economics

Macro data

Will the next inflation print exceed a threshold? Will the central bank cut rates at its next meeting? These contracts let traders express macro views without futures or options.

Culture

Pop culture & sports

Award winners, championship results, weekly box-office numbers, and increasingly entire sports leagues. Sports event contracts have grown rapidly as regulation has clarified.

Science & weather

Real-world thresholds

Will hurricane season produce more than 14 named storms? Will a clinical trial hit its primary endpoint? These markets are slower but often the most accurate.

How accurate are prediction markets?


The central claim for prediction markets is that they aggregate dispersed information into a single, continuously updating price: and that this price tends to beat traditional forecasters. The evidence is genuinely strong, though not unlimited.

Elections

Better than polls, most of the time

The Iowa Electronic Markets, running since 1988, have consistently produced more accurate election forecasts than major opinion polls in the final week before US presidential elections. Academic studies have found similar results for Intrade and for Polymarket in 2024, though markets have also been wrong, sometimes badly, when liquidity was thin or when one side was dominated by a single large trader.

Sports

Roughly in line with odds

On mature sports markets, prediction market prices are close to what the best sportsbooks offer, because the same sharp bettors arbitrage between them. The edge is smaller here than in politics or macro.

Macro & policy

Faster than expert panels

For Fed rate decisions, inflation prints, and policy events, prediction markets reprice in seconds when news breaks, while economist surveys update monthly. That speed makes them useful as a real-time sentiment gauge even when their central estimate isn't much better than consensus.

Caveats

Where they break down

Prediction markets are only as good as their liquidity. Markets with low volume, obscure questions, or a single dominant trader can be manipulated or simply wrong. They also can't forecast events no one is thinking to trade on, the classic "black swan" problem.

Risks and regulation


✓ Pros

What they're good at

  • Aggregate dispersed information into a single, real-time price
  • Often more accurate than polls or expert panels
  • Let you express forecasts that traditional markets don't price
  • Low minimums on most major venues ($1 on Kalshi and Polymarket)
✗ Cons

Where they fall short

  • Liquidity dries up fast outside the most popular markets
  • Long-dated contracts tie up capital that could earn yield elsewhere
  • Resolution disputes can occur in ambiguous events
  • Tax treatment is unsettled in many jurisdictions
⚠ Risks

Things to watch

  • You can lose 100% of your stake on any single contract
  • Crypto-settled venues add custody, wallet, and chain risk
  • Regulatory status varies by country and changes quickly
  • Markets can be manipulated when liquidity is shallow
  • No insider-trading laws apply to prediction markets in most jurisdictions
⚖ Regulation

Status varies by country

  • US: CFTC regulates event contracts; Kalshi is fully licensed, Polymarket is relaunching via a licensed derivatives exchange (QCEX)
  • UK, EU: no licensed domestic operators; users access offshore venues in a grey zone
  • Singapore, Hong Kong: generally prohibited under local gambling law
  • Legal status can change with little warning: check your jurisdiction before depositing

The future of prediction markets


After more than two decades in a regulatory gray zone, prediction markets have moved firmly into the financial mainstream. Intercontinental Exchange's October 2025 announcement that it would invest up to $2 billion in Polymarket, while Kalshi, ForecastEx and Robinhood built fully-regulated infrastructure alongside it, marked a genuine inflection point. But the more interesting shifts are still ahead.

🤖 AI forecasters

LLMs as traders

Large language models are now good enough to research questions, read news, and price probabilities better than most human participants on many types of markets. Manifold already hosts AI-run accounts that consistently rank near the top of its leaderboards, and researchers have shown that frontier models can match or beat superforecaster teams on short-horizon questions.

🧠 Autonomous agents

Markets as training grounds

Prediction markets are an almost ideal environment for AI agents to learn from: every bet has a clear, verifiable outcome and a continuous real-money feedback loop. Expect to see agent frameworks built explicitly to trade on Polymarket and Kalshi, and for market operators to add APIs that make programmatic participation easier.

📊 Institutional adoption

From fringe to sentiment gauge

Hedge funds, macro desks, and news organizations increasingly reference prediction market prices in real time. As liquidity deepens, expect event contracts to be treated more like VIX-style sentiment indicators, an input to trading, not just a venue for it.

🌍 More asset classes

Beyond binary politics

Watch for scalar markets on economic data, weather-linked contracts for businesses that need hedges, and question types no one is trading today: corporate earnings ranges, drug approval timelines, and even AI benchmark results. The underlying mechanism generalizes far beyond elections.

Frequently asked questions


What is a prediction market? +

A prediction market is an online platform where people buy and sell event contracts: binary financial instruments that pay a fixed amount (typically $1) if a specified future event occurs and nothing if it does not. The price of a YES share is directly readable as the market's collective implied probability.

Are prediction markets legal? +

It depends on your country. In the US, the CFTC regulates them as derivatives; Kalshi and ForecastEx are fully licensed. In the UK and Europe, no domestic licensed operators currently exist but users typically access offshore platforms. Check the guide for your specific jurisdiction.

What is the difference between Kalshi and Polymarket? +

Kalshi is a CFTC-regulated exchange settling in USD: the most compliant venue for US users. Polymarket settles in USDC on the Polygon blockchain and is globally accessible via a wallet; it is currently relaunching a licensed US product. Kalshi is the better choice if you want regulatory protection; Polymarket if you want the deepest liquidity and on-chain settlement.

How accurate are prediction markets? +

Evidence is strong for high-liquidity markets on well-defined questions. The Iowa Electronic Markets have beaten major election polls consistently since 1988. Polymarket's 2024 US election prices were highly accurate. The caveat: accuracy degrades sharply in thin markets where a single trader can move the price.

How are prediction market winnings taxed? +

Tax treatment varies by country. In the US, platforms like Kalshi issue 1099-MISC forms and profits are taxed as ordinary income. In most European jurisdictions there is no specific guidance and profits are typically treated as miscellaneous income or capital gains. Always check with a local tax adviser.

A few words of caution


Event contracts are short-term, all-or-nothing bets on uncertain outcomes: closer in risk profile to sports betting than to long-term investing, and similarly capable of becoming addictive. Treat them as entertainment, not wealth-building. Don't bet money you can't afford to lose, set a budget and stick to it, and never use prediction markets as a substitute for diversified long-term investing. Nothing on this site is financial advice. Always check the legal status in your specific jurisdiction before trading.

Choose your market


Localized guides to the regulators, legal status, and accessible operators in each major market: with platform availability, tax framing, and risks written for that jurisdiction in the local language.

🇺🇸

United States

CFTC-regulated exchanges, state-level guide, broker-embedded contracts.

🇬🇧

United Kingdom

FCA and Gambling Commission framing, platform access for UK users.

🇩🇪

Deutschland

BaFin und GGL: Prognosemärkte auf Deutsch erklärt.

🇸🇪

Sverige

Prediktionsmarknader för svenska användare: på svenska.

🇳🇴

Norge

Prediksjonsmarkeder og Lotteritilsynet: på norsk.

🇪🇸

España

Mercados de predicción y la DGOJ: en español.

🇫🇮

Suomi

Ennustemarkkinat ja Veikkaus: suomeksi.

🇩🇰

Danmark

Prædiktionsmarkeder og Spillemyndigheden: på dansk.

🇪🇪

Eesti

Ennustusbooturud ja MTA: eesti keeles.

🇱🇻

Latvija

Prognožu tirgi un IAUI: latviešu valodā.

🇱🇹

Lietuva

Prognozių rinkos ir LLK: lietuvių kalba.

🇬🇷

Ελλάδα

Αγορές πρόβλεψης και ΕΕΕΠ: στα ελληνικά.

🇮🇪

Éire

Margaí tuartha agus an RGAI: as Gaeilge.

🇭🇷

Hrvatska

Predikacijska tržišta i MF: na hrvatskom.

🇨🇿

Česká republika

Predikční trhy a MF: v češtině.

🇱🇺

Lëtzebuerg

Prognosemerket a CSSF: op Lëtzebuergesch.

🇲🇹

Malta

Swieq tal-previżjoni u MGA: bil-Malti.

🇵🇹

Portugal

Mercados de previsão e SRIJ: em português.

🇷🇴

România

Piețe de predicție și ONJN: în română.

🇸🇰

Slovensko

Predikčné trhy a UHaZ: po slovensky.

🇸🇮

Slovenija

Napovedni trgi in ATVP, v slovenščini.

🇫🇷

France

Marchés de prédiction, AMF et ANJ, en français.

🇳🇱

Nederland

Voorspellingsmarkten, AFM en Kansspelautoriteit, in het Nederlands.

🇮🇹

Italia

Mercati di previsione, Consob e ADM, in italiano.

🇦🇺

Australia

ASIC and AUSTRAC framing, platform access for Australian users.

🇯🇵

日本

日本の予測市場ガイド、日本語で。

🇰🇷

대한민국

한국의 예측 시장 가이드, 한국어로.

🇧🇷

Brasil

Mercados de previsão no Brasil, em português.

🇲🇽

México

Mercados de predicción en México y LATAM, en español.

🇮🇩

Indonesia

Panduan pasar prediksi untuk pengguna Indonesia, dalam bahasa Indonesia.

🇦🇪

الإمارات

دليل أسواق التنبؤ للإمارات العربية المتحدة، باللغة العربية.

🇸🇦

السعودية

دليل أسواق التنبؤ للمملكة العربية السعودية، باللغة العربية.