Election Guide
    April 202610 min read

    2026 Midterm Elections Prediction Market Trading Guide

    Where to trade, what markets are open, race-by-race Cook ratings, and strategies for navigating the most active political trading season since 2024.

    Platforms Active

    4

    Senate Races

    35

    Key Toss-Ups

    4

    Read Time

    10 min

    Quick Summary

    The key takeaway from this page

    Two CFTC-regulated platforms (Kalshi, ForecastEx) and Polymarket's global platform offer active 2026 midterm markets. Democrats are slight favorites for both chambers. Key races: GA, ME, MI, NC. Zero-fee political trading on Kalshi.

    Last updated: April 2026

    2026 Midterm Elections — Prediction Market Trading Guide

    Where to trade, what markets are open, race-by-race Cook ratings, and strategies for navigating the most active political trading season since 2024.

    Verified March 14, 2026. Senate composition, race ratings, and platform market availability confirmed via senate.gov, Cook Political Report (Jan 12, 2026), Kalshi, and Polymarket. Market odds change constantly — check each platform for live prices.

    What's at Stake

    Senate & House control in 2026

    U.S. Senate

    53 R – 47 D

    Current composition, 119th Congress. Includes 2 independents caucusing with Democrats.

    Seats up in 2026: 35 (33 Class II + 2 special elections in FL & OH)

    D gain needed for majority: Net +4 seats

    R seats defending: 22 of the 35

    U.S. House

    Republican Majority

    Republicans hold the House in the 119th Congress. 218 seats needed for majority.

    All 435 seats up for election Nov 3, 2026

    Cook Toss-Ups: ~18 House seats (as of Jan 2026)

    Historical pattern: President's party typically loses House seats in midterms

    Why This Cycle Matters for Prediction Markets

    The 2026 midterms are the first full congressional election cycle with broad CFTC-regulated prediction market access. Kalshi and ForecastEx offer political election contracts as CFTC-regulated DCMs. Polymarket's CFTC-regulated US entity (QCX LLC) is live for sports markets only — midterm political contracts are on Polymarket's global (offshore) platform. The combination of competitive Senate races and a historically favorable House map for Democrats has driven record early trading volume.

    Where to Trade 2026 Midterm Markets

    Platform comparison for election trading

    Two CFTC-regulated platforms (Kalshi, ForecastEx) offer active 2026 midterm election markets. Polymarket's global platform also hosts midterm markets but its CFTC-regulated US entity (QCX LLC) is sports-only. Each platform has different liquidity, fee structure, and settlement rules.

    Kalshi

    Deepest Liquidity
    CFTC DCM + DCO

    Active Markets

    • • House control (2026)
    • • Senate control (2026)
    • • Balance of power combo
    • • Individual Senate races
    • • Individual House races
    • • Governor races

    Key Details

    • • Fees: ≤1.75¢/contract (formula-based)
    • • Politics and policy markets: zero taker fees, zero maker fees
    • • Settlement: AP race calls
    • • Deposit: USD (ACH, debit card)
    • • 20+ federal and state actions pending as of April 2026. Mixed outcomes: NJ 3rd Circuit ruled for Kalshi (Apr 6); CFTC won Federal TRO in AZ (Apr 10, PR 9211-26); OH OCCC $5M fine notice (Apr 14); KY HB 904 enacted via veto override (Apr 14); WA AG civil suit pending (Mar 27).

    Kalshi has the deepest liquidity for US congressional markets and the widest selection of individual race contracts. Politics markets carry zero taker and maker fees — you trade on price movement, not fee drag.

    Trade on Kalshi

    Polymarket

    Widest Market SelectionGlobal Platform Only
    Global platform (not CFTC-regulated for political markets)

    Active Markets

    • • Balance of Power: 2026 Midterms
    • • Which party wins Senate?
    • • Which party wins House?
    • • 146+ individual midterm markets
    • • Individual Senate races (most states)
    • • House district races

    Key Details

    • • Geopolitics and world events only — zero trading fees
    • • US venue fee: 0.75% peak taker fee for sports (probability-based; near-zero for heavy favorites)
    • • Settlement: AP + Fox News + NBC
    • • Deposit: USDC, card, or bank
    • • US relaunch: December 2025 (invite-only, sports markets only; other categories coming soon)

    Polymarket's global platform hosts the widest range of midterm markets by count, including the popular Balance of Power combo contract ($3.5M+ volume as of April 2026). Note: These political markets are on Polymarket's global (offshore) platform, not the CFTC-regulated US entity (QCX LLC), which currently offers sports markets only. US residents should verify their access and legal status before trading political markets on the global platform.

    Trade on Polymarket

    ForecastEx (Interactive Brokers)

    Institutional
    CFTC DCM (ForecastEx)

    Active Markets

    • • 2026 primaries
    • • 2026 general elections
    • • Economic + climate contracts
    • • Financial market contracts

    Key Details

    • • Fees: $0 commission; $0.01/contract exchange fee built into price
    • • Contracts pay $1.00 at settlement
    • • Integrated with IBKR brokerage

    ForecastEx offers 2026 election contracts alongside economic and financial derivatives — ideal for traders who want to combine political and macro positions in one brokerage account.

    Trade on ForecastEx

    PredictIt

    CFTC No-Action Letter

    Legacy platform with select political markets under its CFTC no-action letter. Fees are higher (10% profit fee + 5% withdrawal), and position limits apply ($3,500 per contract). Suitable for traders who prefer a familiar interface for small-position political trading.

    Platform Fee Comparison: Election Contracts

    Side-by-side fee structure

    PlatformRegulationElection FeeSettlement
    KalshiCFTC DCM + DCOPolitics and policy markets: zero taker fees, zero maker feesAP race calls
    PolymarketCFTC DCM (via QCX LLC)Free / US: 0.75% peak taker fee for sports (probability-based; near-zero for heavy favorites)AP + Fox + NBC
    ForecastEx (Interactive Brokers)CFTC DCM (ForecastEx)$0 commission; $0.01/contract exchange fee built into priceOfficial results
    PredictItCFTC No-Action Letter10% profit fee + 5% withdrawalOfficial results

    All fee data from our verified platform database. Election markets on Kalshi carry zero fees — the only cost is the bid/ask spread.

    Key Senate Races — Cook Political Report Ratings

    Toss-up and competitive seats

    Ratings from Cook Political Report, January 12, 2026. Source: cookpolitical.com

    Georgia

    Toss-Up

    Ossoff (D)

    Dems' most vulnerable seat. Most competitive pickup opportunity for R.

    Maine

    Toss-Up

    Collins (R)

    Only sitting R senator from a state that voted Harris in 2024.

    Michigan

    Toss-Up

    Open (D)

    Open seat after Peters retirement. Competitive primary for both parties.

    North Carolina

    Toss-Up

    Open (R)

    Tillis retired. Primaries settled March 3: Roy Cooper (D) vs. Michael Whatley (R, Trump-endorsed RNC chair). Cooper is undefeated statewide; Democrats' best pickup opportunity.

    Alaska

    Lean R

    Sullivan (R)

    Competitive enough to watch; Sullivan faces a credible challenger.

    Ohio (Special)

    Lean R

    Husted (R)

    Sherrod Brown (D) is running — announced Aug 2025. Special election for Vance's vacated seat; winner serves through 2028, then must run again. Polls show Brown and Husted effectively tied.

    New Hampshire

    Lean D

    Open (D)

    Shaheen retiring. Slight D lean but competitive.

    The Arithmetic

    Democrats need to flip four net seats to reach 51. That means winning both Toss-Ups on the Democratic side (Georgia and Michigan), flipping both of Cook's most vulnerable Republican seats (Maine and North Carolina), and then finding at least one more pickup from the next tier such as Ohio or Alaska while holding the rest of their own map. Cook's overall framing was that Republicans still had the structural edge. Markets as of March 14, 2026 give Democrats a 51% chance of Senate control (Kalshi) and 51% (Polymarket).

    Live Market Snapshot — March 14, 2026

    Current odds across platforms

    Prices from Kalshi and Polymarket public markets as of March 14, 2026. These change constantly — check each platform for current odds.

    OutcomeKalshiPolymarket
    Democrats win House84¢85¢
    Democrats win Senate51¢51¢
    Democrats sweep both chambers50¢49¢
    D House, R Senate (split)37¢36¢
    Republicans sweep both chambers14¢17¢

    Prices = implied probability. 84¢ means an 84% market-implied chance. Check each platform live before trading.

    How Election Markets Work

    Binary contracts explained

    Binary contracts: YES or NO

    Each prediction market contract is a binary bet. You buy YES or NO on a specific question — for example, “Will Democrats control the House after the 2026 elections?” If the outcome happens, YES pays $1.00. If it doesn't, YES pays $0 (and NO pays $1.00). The price at any moment reflects the market's implied probability.

    Settlement triggers

    Election markets settle when the designated resolution source calls the race. Kalshi uses the Associated Press. Polymarket's Balance of Power market requires AP, Fox News, and NBC to reach consensus. Contracts do not wait for official state certification — the AP call is typically sufficient. ForecastEx uses official results.

    Exit before November

    You don't have to hold through election night. Prediction market contracts trade like securities — you can sell your position at any time at the current market price. If you buy Democrats win House at 84¢ and the market moves to 90¢ on good news, you can exit and lock in the gain without waiting for settlement.

    Individual races vs. chamber control

    Chamber-level markets (House control, Senate control) reflect the aggregate result. Individual race markets let you trade specific seats — a competitive Senate race in Georgia, a redistricted House district. Individual markets tend to have less liquidity and wider bid/ask spreads than chamber-level markets.

    “More and more prospective participants are trying to enter this market and there doesn't seem to be any barrier. The applications are practically limitless, in the sense that we're full of questions about the future all the time. I'm incredibly bullish on this space, especially with elections coming this year.”

    — Thomas Peterffy, Founder & Chairman of Interactive Brokers

    Reuters, January 14, 2026 (by Anirban Sen)

    Trading Strategies for 2026 Midterms

    Five approaches for election traders

    1. Fade the extremes early

    When chamber control markets open very wide (one side at 80¢+), the market may be overreacting to a single data point. Early-cycle prices are set with thin liquidity. The summer lull often provides better entry points before October volatility compresses spreads.

    2. Arbitrage Senate vs. House vs. Balance of Power

    The Balance of Power combo contract (both chambers) should price roughly equal to Senate × House probabilities. When the combo is mispriced vs. the individual chamber markets, there's a mathematical arbitrage. Watch for these especially on Polymarket where both the individual and combo markets trade simultaneously.

    3. Individual race alpha on the Senate map

    The four Cook Toss-Up races (GA, ME, MI, NC) are the key levers. When local polling drops or a strong candidate enters, individual race markets often react faster than the chamber-level market. Trading individual races gives you more targeted exposure than chamber control.

    4. Cross-platform price discovery

    Kalshi and Polymarket often show 1–3¢ spreads on the same outcome. When the spread widens to 5¢+, you can buy YES on one platform and NO on the other for a near-riskless profit. Account for fees and deposit/withdrawal friction when calculating net edge.

    5. Timing: watch primary results

    Midterm primaries conclude June–August 2026. A weak nominee in a competitive state (e.g., an extreme candidate in NC or ME) causes immediate price moves. General election markets often open or significantly reprice after primaries settle.

    Sources & Methodology

    Senate composition & seat counts: senate.gov party division (119th Congress); corroborated by NYT (Mar 14, 2026), 270toWin, and Kalshi news.kalshi.com (Jan 8, 2026).

    Race ratings: Cook Political Report, Senate Race Ratings, January 12, 2026 (cookpolitical.com).

    Platform market availability: Kalshi: news.kalshi.com (Mar 14, 2026). Polymarket: polymarket.com/predictions/midterms (Mar 14, 2026). ForecastEx: Reuters (Jan 14, 2026).

    Market prices: Kalshi public orderbook data, Mar 14, 2026 (news.kalshi.com/p/2026-senate-odds-democrats-now-favored). Polymarket public market data, Mar 14, 2026 (polymarket.com/event/balance-of-power-2026-midterms).

    Peterffy quote: Reuters, Jan 14, 2026, "Interactive Brokers says betting on US midterm elections should juice growth of its platform," by Anirban Sen. Exact wording verified across multiple syndicated copies (Yahoo Finance, MarketScreener, KFGO).

    Platform data: All platform fees, regulation, and features from our verified platform database.

    This page does not constitute financial, legal, or political advice. Market odds change constantly — verify current prices on each platform before trading.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    5 common questions answered

    Continue exploring