Last updated: April 2026

    Category Guide

    Politics Prediction Markets

    Trade presidential elections, Senate races, policy votes, and global political events. Here's how political prediction markets work, where to trade, and what to watch out for.

    Most liquid PM categoryAvailable on 3+ US platforms

    What Are Political Prediction Markets?

    Political prediction markets are binary event contracts where you buy or sell shares in an outcome. If the event occurs, the contract resolves at $1 (YES). If it does not, it resolves at $0 (NO). The price at any moment represents the market's implied probability of that outcome.

    Political markets were controversial in the US for years. Kalshi received CFTC approval in November 2020 and launched in 2021.Polymarket relaunched for US users in December 2025 (invite-only, sports markets only; other categories coming soon) via its CFTC-regulated entity QCX LLC — currently offering sports markets only, with politics and other categories coming soon. Interactive Brokers (ForecastEx) also lists politics markets as a CFTC-regulated DCM. Robinhood and Coinbase offer Kalshi-powered political event contracts.

    CFTC Authorization: Kalshi isCFTC DCM + DCO (since November 2020).Polymarket operates via QCX LLC (CFTC DCM (via QCX LLC)). Kalshi is the primary US platform for political prediction markets as of early 2026. QCX LLC's current U.S. venue remains sports-only, with political markets listed as coming soon. The global Polymarket platform has significantly deeper liquidity for political markets but cannot be accessed by US residents.

    See full regulatory history →

    Major Political Market Categories

    US Presidential

    Elections, primaries, electoral college outcomes.

    Will the Democratic candidate win the 2028 presidential election?

    Senate and House

    Congressional races, majority control, special elections.

    Will Democrats retake the Senate majority in 2026?

    Global Elections

    UK, France, Germany, Israel, and major international contests.

    Will the current UK Prime Minister win re-election?

    Policy Votes

    Budget, debt ceiling, major legislation outcomes.

    Will the US debt ceiling be raised before the deadline?

    Supreme Court

    Nomination outcomes, landmark ruling predictions.

    Will the next Supreme Court nominee be confirmed?

    Cabinet and Nominees

    Confirmation votes, appointment outcomes.

    Will the nominated Treasury Secretary be confirmed?

    Approval and Polling

    Presidential approval thresholds, polling crossover markets.

    Will presidential approval exceed 50% by Q4?

    Conflict and Diplomacy

    Treaty ratification, ceasefire agreements, sanctions.

    Will a formal ceasefire be announced in the current conflict?

    Best Platforms for Political Prediction Markets

    PlatformPolitical CoverageUS Legal?Fees / LimitsNotable Strength
    KalshiUS elections, Senate/House, policy votes, CFTC-authorized political contractsYesCFTC-regulated DCM≤1.75¢/contract (formula-based)Deepest US event order books; politics/policy markets are zero-fee
    Polymarket (International)Global elections, international political events (International only — Polymarket US is sports-only; politics expected 2026)International only for politicsCFTC DCM via QCX LLCSports 0.75% peak; Crypto 1.80% peak; Politics/Finance/Tech 1.00%; most fee-free at extremesDeepest global political liquidity (International); US version does not yet offer politics
    Interactive Brokers (ForecastEx)US elections, policy votes, international political eventsYesCFTC-regulated DCM (ForecastEx)Via IBKR brokerage accountInstitutional-grade platform; politics is a core category alongside economics
    RobinhoodUS elections, policy votes (via Kalshi)YesRoutes through Kalshi (CFTC DCM)$0.02/contractFamiliar brokerage interface; Kalshi-powered politics markets
    CoinbaseUS elections, policy votes (via Kalshi)YesRoutes through Kalshi (CFTC DCM)Via Coinbase account49 states (NV blocked by Mar 2026 preliminary injunction); Kalshi-powered politics markets
    PredictItUS federal elections, congressional races, gubernatorial contestsYesCFTC No-Action Letter (since 2014)$3,500 per contract (revised 2025)Long track record since 2014, granular congressional markets; academic research framework

    The Insider Trading Problem and the BETS OFF Act

    Congressional scrutiny of prediction markets intensified in early 2026. The BETS OFF Act (Sen. Chris Murphy / Rep. Greg Casar, introduced March 17, 2026) would ban prediction markets from offering contracts on war, terrorism, assassination, and events where someone knows or controls the outcome. A separate Merkley/Klobuchar bill (introduced March 5, 2026) would ban elected officials, the president, and vice president from trading event contracts. Currently there is no federal law preventing politicians from trading markets about outcomes they may have inside knowledge about.

    This is why contract transparency and resolution source disclosure matter more in political markets than any other category. When you cannot verify that prices reflect public information only, the trust foundation of the market is weakened.

    PredictionMarkets.us tracks this legislation. Multiple bills (BETS OFF Act, Merkley/Klobuchar bill, DEATH BETS Act) are pending. Until one passes, trading by political insiders remains legal but contested. Always review the resolution criteria and consider whether thin order books might reflect information asymmetry.

    How Political Markets Actually Resolve

    Who Decides?

    Kalshi uses an internal resolution team that follows CFTC standards. Polymarket uses the UMA decentralized oracle, which can be disputed through an on-chain process. PredictIt uses an internal moderation team. Each platform publishes resolution criteria per contract.

    What Triggers Resolution?

    For electoral races: most platforms resolve on the first call from a major outlet (AP, Fox, NBC, or CNN). For policy votes: official Congressional Record or presidential signing/veto. For approval markets: published polling data from specified sources on specified dates.

    Recounts and Certification

    Markets typically hold resolution until the official canvass is certified or the legal dispute period expires. Platforms do NOT resolve on election night calls alone for contested or close races. Expect 1–6 weeks of open positions following a contested election.

    Candidate Withdrawal or Disqualification

    Most contracts void or resolve NO if a candidate withdraws before the election, is disqualified, or dies. Edge cases vary significantly by platform and contract. Always read the full resolution criteria for the specific contract before trading.

    Resolution rules vary per contract. Always read the full resolution criteria before trading.

    Full guide: How markets settle →

    How to Trade Political Markets

    Liquidity spikes near events

    Order books deepen and spreads tighten around debates, primary results, and election night. This is when price discovery is most efficient — and when large moves happen fastest.

    Incumbent pricing advantage

    Incumbents are historically over-priced in early trading due to name recognition bias. Challenger contracts often offer better value in the 6–12 months before an election.

    News shock and mean reversion

    Sharp price moves after a single debate performance or news cycle often fade within 48–72 hours as the market re-prices to underlying fundamentals.

    High-probability contracts have limited upside

    A contract at 95¢ can only earn 5¢ if it resolves YES. The downside is 95¢. At 90¢+, the risk-reward is rarely favorable unless you have strong timing conviction.

    Treat as binary risk, not investment

    Political markets are event contracts. Position size accordingly. A 10% allocation to a single political binary is typically too concentrated.

    Risk note: Political markets can stay mispriced for months. Structural biases, thin order books, and information asymmetry are real. Do not overweight your certainty on any single political outcome.

    Notable Political Market Moments

    2016 US Election

    Prediction market prices moved in real-time during election night faster than news network projections. Markets had priced Clinton at 80–90% through most of the night before reversing sharply as results came in from key swing states.

    Brexit 2016

    The most-traded international political prediction market event of the decade. Markets showed near-certainty of Remain heading into the vote; overnight results caused the single largest political market swing ever recorded at the time.

    2020 Certification Delay

    Platforms held resolution for six weeks after Election Day while official canvassing and certification completed. This was the first major test of how regulated platforms handle contested election resolution timelines.

    2024 Presidential Market

    The largest political prediction market in US history by volume. Markets tracked polling aggregators closely but provided real-time liquidity that polls could not match during rapid news cycles.

    Are Political Prediction Markets Harmful?

    New to prediction markets? Here's what you're actually looking at.

    Who's trading this?

    Kalshi: US-only, verified accounts, regulated by CFTC as a DCM. Polymarket: international crypto traders (no US retail via QCX LLC rules). This matters when you're interpreting a spread — the two price feeds come from different populations.

    Can a whale just move the price?

    Kalshi caps positions at $25K on most political contracts. Polymarket has higher limits — we flag concentrated positioning with a CONCENTRATED badge when top positions exceed 30% of volume.

    Is this just gambling?

    Political markets resolve on a specific public trigger: AP call, electoral certification, or CFTC-designated source. The rule is fixed when the market opens. It is NOT 'who the media thinks won' — the resolution rule is the only thing that matters.

    These markets exist to aggregate public forecasts, not to profit from outcomes. No one 'wins' because a policy goes badly — they win because they correctly read the consensus before it shifted.

    Read our full gambling vs. investing analysis →

    All Prediction Market Platforms

    Compare every platform available to US traders.

    CFTC DCM + DCO

    Fees:≤1.75¢/contract (formula-based)
    Available in US

    CFTC DCM (via QCX LLC)

    Fees:Sports 0.75% peak; Crypto 1.80% peak; Politics/Finance/Tech 1.00%; most fee-free at extremes
    Available in US

    CFTC No-Action Letter

    Fees:10% profit fee + 5% withdrawal
    Available in US

    CFTC FCM + Rothera DCM pending

    Fees:$0.02/contract ($0.01 RH + $0.01 Kalshi)
    Check platform

    CFTC via CME Group

    Fees:2% of potential payout at checkout
    Available in 18 states

    CFTC IB via CME DCM

    Fees:$0.01/contract/side + exchange fees (~$0.02+ round-trip)
    Available in 38 states

    CDNA DCM + DCO

    Fees:$0.02/contract ($1 markets), $0.20/contract ($10 markets); tech fee waived on wins
    Available in US

    Via Kalshi (CFTC DCM)

    Available in US

    CFTC DCM (ForecastEx)

    Available in US

    Via Kalshi (CFTC DCM)

    Available in US

    CFTC DCM pending

    Available in US

    CFTC DCM (via CDNA)

    Available in US

    Via Kalshi + CME

    Fees:Via Kalshi (B2C); clearing partner (B2B)
    Available in US

    CFTC FCM + DCM/DCO

    Fees:$0.02 per contract (flat fee, built into entry price)
    Available in US

    CFTC FCM

    Available in US

    Sweepstakes; DCM/DCO pending

    Available in US

    State licenses; DCM pending

    Available in 5 states

    Via CDNA (CFTC DCM)

    Fees:$0.02/contract (open + close)
    Check platform

    FCM via Kalshi (CFTC DCM)

    Fees:~$0.02/contract total
    Check platform

    Not regulated (no real money)

    Fees:Free
    Check platform

    CFTC DCM (Gemini Titan LLC)

    Fees:0.05% taker / 0.01% maker
    Available in US

    Frequently Asked Questions