Sports contracts vs political contracts
Sports event contracts and political event contracts may look similar on screen, but they face different regulatory histories, different resolution characteristics, and different liquidity patterns. Understanding those differences helps traders evaluate which markets to trust and which platforms to use.
Sports contracts vs political contracts
US regulatory distinction
The CFTC approved Kalshi's first political and macroeconomic event contracts in 2020 and 2021. Sports contracts were more contentious: the major US sports leagues lobbied against them, arguing that legal wagering on games would create integrity risks. Kalshi sued the CFTC in 2024 after the regulator tried to block sports contracts, and a federal court ruled in Kalshi's favor in 2025, clearing the way for CFTC-regulated sports event contracts on DCM-licensed venues. The legal distinction between sports contracts and political or economic ones is now largely resolved in the US, but the history explains why sports markets arrived later and on fewer platforms.
Resolution differences
Sports outcomes are typically fast, binary, and unambiguous: a team wins or loses, a player scores or does not. Resolution usually happens within hours of the event. Political outcomes can be contested, delayed, or dependent on certification processes that take days or weeks. A market on "who wins the presidential election" may not resolve until after electoral college certification. Markets on legislative outcomes (will a bill pass?) can be ambiguous when bills are amended or procedurally stalled. These differences affect how long capital is tied up and how much resolution risk traders face.
Liquidity patterns
Sports markets follow the sports calendar: high volume during the season, low to zero volume in the off-season. A Kalshi NFL market will have deep liquidity in September through January and essentially none in July. Political markets build slowly over months, spike dramatically in the weeks before an election, and then go quiet until the next cycle. Economic data markets (CPI, Fed decisions) have regular monthly or quarterly pulses. Understanding these patterns matters for position sizing: a market that will be thinly traded for the next three months is harder to exit quickly if you need to.
Who offers what
As of early 2026, Kalshi offers sports, politics, and economic data contracts under its DCM licence. Polymarket offers politics and economics but no sports contracts, partly because it operates outside the US regulatory framework. Robinhood offers sports event contracts through a partnership with Kalshi's technology, using the MIAXdx DCM it acquired in January 2026. ForecastEx, operated by Interactive Brokers, offers a narrower set of economic and political contracts. Traders wanting to access sports markets are currently limited to DCM-licensed US venues.
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