Polymarket: The Platform That Turns the Future Into a Market
In October 2024, while every mainstream pollster called the US presidential election a coin flip, Polymarket had Donald Trump at 58% versus Kamala Harris at 42%. That wasn't a lucky guess — it was the aggregated conviction of tens of thousands of traders putting real money on the line. When the results came in, it wasn't even close. Polymarket had seen it coming for weeks.
Welcome to the world's largest prediction market — a place where the future has a price, where knowledge pays, and where regulators around the world are still trying to figure out whether to classify it as a financial exchange, a casino, or something else entirely.
What is Polymarket?
Polymarket is a decentralized prediction market built on the Polygon blockchain. Founded in 2020 by Shayne Coplan, it allows anyone to trade shares in the outcome of real-world events. Every market is a binary question: Will X happen by date Y?
You buy YES or NO shares. Each share is priced between $0.01 and $0.99, and that price directly represents the market's implied probability of that outcome. A YES share trading at $0.72 means the collective intelligence of all traders on the platform believes there is a 72% chance that event will happen.
If you're right, you collect $1.00. If you're wrong, you collect $0.00. Everything is settled in USDC, the dollar-backed stablecoin, on the Polygon network.
The markets span everything:
- Politics: Who wins the next election? Will a bill pass? Will a president resign?
- Economics: Will the Fed cut rates? Will inflation hit 4%? Will a recession be declared?
- Sports: Will a team win the championship? Who scores the first goal?
- Science and Tech: Will GPT-5 be released by Q2? Will a manned Mars mission launch?
- Entertainment: Who wins the Oscars? Will a celebrity couple divorce?
- Geopolitics: Will a ceasefire hold? Will a country default on its debt?
The platform currently hosts thousands of active markets and has exceeded $10 billion in total trading volume — a figure that would have been unimaginable when it launched with a handful of low-liquidity markets in 2020.
The "Wisdom of Crowds" Effect
Polymarket's predictive power comes from a well-documented phenomenon in social science: the wisdom of crowds. When large numbers of independent people with diverse information all make estimates, their collective average tends to be more accurate than any single expert.
James Surowiecki popularized this idea in his 2004 book of the same name. Academic researchers at the Iowa Electronic Markets demonstrated it with political prediction markets decades before crypto made it mainstream. The key ingredient is financial skin in the game — when people put real money behind their beliefs, they think carefully. They don't express opinions; they commit to positions.
This is why Polymarket repeatedly outperforms polls, analysts, and pundits. Polls measure stated preferences. Polymarket measures revealed preferences backed by capital.
The Biden example is instructive: In June 2024, just days after a disastrous debate performance, Polymarket shifted to a 70% probability that Biden would withdraw from the race — when his own party publicly insisted he was staying. He withdrew weeks later. The market knew before the media did.
Is It Investing, Gambling, or Speculation?
This is the question regulators, academics, and users themselves can't agree on. Let's take each seriously.
The Case for Investing
Like financial markets, Polymarket rewards information advantage. If you are an expert in epidemiology and you see a market dramatically underestimating the likelihood of a disease outbreak, you can profit from your edge. You are, in effect, performing price discovery on an information market.
Like stocks or bonds, the price reflects a probability-weighted expectation. The methodology is identical to how institutional investors price risk. Credit default swaps, weather derivatives, and catastrophe bonds all work on the same logic. Polymarket is simply applying that framework to a wider range of events.
Shayne Coplan has called it "the most accurate thing we have as mankind right now" for forecasting. That's a bold claim — but it's increasingly hard to argue with.
The Case for Speculation
Most retail users on Polymarket are not domain experts. They are making speculative bets based on news, sentiment, and gut feeling. That is speculation in the classic sense — taking a position in the hope of a gain, without a fundamental analytical edge.
This is not inherently bad. Speculators provide liquidity and help price discovery. Every market needs speculators. But it means many participants are not operating with any analytical advantage — they are essentially playing the market rather than investing in their knowledge.
The Case for Gambling
Some markets on Polymarket — particularly sports outcomes, entertainment awards, and short-term news events — are structurally very close to sports betting. You are wagering on an outcome with defined odds. The event is out of your control. The resolution is binary.
The $45 million bet placed by a single anonymous French trader during the 2024 US election on a Trump victory raised serious questions. Did that trader have an edge, or was it a high-conviction gamble? Did the size of the bet distort the market odds, which then influenced media coverage, which then influenced voters? The feedback loop between prediction markets and reality is murky and unresolved.
The honest answer is that Polymarket is all three, depending on who is using it and how. It is a sophisticated information market for experts, a speculative vehicle for retail traders, and a betting platform for the casually curious. The line between them is not cleanly drawn, and that ambiguity is precisely why it terrifies regulators.
The Ban List: Why Countries Are Shutting It Down
United States
Polymarket's relationship with US regulators is the most complicated. In 2022, Polymarket paid a $1.4 million settlement to the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) for offering unregistered binary event contracts to US persons. The platform subsequently geo-blocked American users.
The story did not end there. By late 2025, following a multi-year compliance overhaul and the acquisition of QCEX, a CFTC-licensed derivatives exchange, Polymarket received an Amended Order of Designation as a Designated Contract Market — a fully regulated status that allowed a limited return to the US market. It relaunched in December 2025 as an invite-only platform with restricted markets.
That reopening immediately ran into state-level opposition. Nevada filed a civil complaint arguing Polymarket needed a state gaming license. Tennessee's sports betting regulator issued shutdown orders. Massachusetts courts ruled that prediction market contracts functioned as illegal sports wagering under state law. The regulatory patchwork in the US means federal clearance does not automatically resolve state-level gambling laws — and those laws vary enormously.
France
France's national gambling regulator, the Autorité Nationale des Jeux (ANJ), ordered Polymarket blocked in late 2025. The ANJ ruled that Polymarket's crypto prediction markets constituted illegal gambling under French law, regardless of how the platform characterizes them.
The timing was not coincidental. Polymarket processed an estimated $3.2 billion in election volume during the 2024 US presidential race, with French users visibly active. That visibility invited scrutiny. The ANJ approached Polymarket's operator — a Panamanian entity called Adventure One QSS Inc. — and demanded IP-level blocking of French users.
Other Restricted Regions
Beyond the US and France, Polymarket currently geo-blocks users from a significant and growing list of jurisdictions, including the United Kingdom, North Korea, Iran, Cuba, Syria, and several others. The UK ban stems from similar gambling-classification concerns raised by the Gambling Commission. In sanctioned countries, the issue is straightforward US Treasury compliance — USDC is a US dollar instrument and cannot flow to sanctioned entities.
The common thread across most bans is the same: authorities cannot agree whether prediction markets are financial instruments (regulated by financial authorities) or gambling products (regulated by gaming authorities). Until that question is settled, the safest move for regulators is to ban first and legislate later.
Can You Access It From Restricted Countries?
Technically, yes. In practice, it carries serious risk.
Many users in restricted regions attempt to use a VPN to mask their IP address and appear to be connecting from an unrestricted jurisdiction. Polymarket explicitly prohibits this in its Terms of Service, and its geo-detection systems go well beyond simple IP checking.
The documented consequences for accounts caught using VPNs include:
- Account suspension, temporary or permanent
- Funds frozen pending compliance review
- In multiple documented cases, funds frozen indefinitely with no clear path to recovery
Reddit threads, X posts, and Discord servers are full of users who successfully accessed the platform via VPN for months — until they didn't. The asymmetry of the risk is stark: if you win small bets, you might withdraw without issue. If you build up a significant balance and are then flagged, your funds can be frozen with limited recourse. The platform is not a bank. There is no deposit insurance. There is no regulatory body you can appeal to.
The pragmatic advice is simple: if you're in a restricted jurisdiction, the platform is inaccessible to you in a meaningful sense. The VPN workaround is not a reliable or safe solution, and treating it as one is a way to lose money twice — first in the market, then to a compliance hold.
Why It Matters Beyond the Bets
Even if you never put a cent on Polymarket, it is worth understanding what prediction markets represent. They are arguably the most honest price signal we have for uncertain future events.
Financial markets price the future of companies. Bond markets price sovereign risk. Prediction markets, at their best, price the future of everything else — elections, policies, conflicts, scientific breakthroughs. A world in which those signals are accurate and accessible gives better information to journalists, policymakers, researchers, and citizens.
The $10 billion in volume is not just money changing hands. It is millions of people expressing their informed beliefs about how the world will unfold, in a form that forces them to be honest because their capital depends on it. That is a genuinely useful social function.
Whether Polymarket itself survives the regulatory storm it currently faces is, appropriately enough, a question you could probably find a market for on Polymarket.
Getting Started (If You're in an Eligible Jurisdiction)
If you're in a country where Polymarket is accessible, the entry process is relatively straightforward:
- Create a wallet. Polymarket integrates with social login wallets (via Magic.link), so you don't need MetaMask or deep crypto knowledge.
- Deposit USDC. You'll need USDC on the Polygon network. You can bridge from Ethereum or buy directly through supported on-ramps.
- Browse markets and trade. Shares are bought and sold through an automated market maker. You can enter and exit most liquid markets at any time before resolution.
- Withdrawal. Winnings are paid in USDC and can be withdrawn to your wallet or converted back to fiat through exchanges.
Minimum bets are small — you can start with a few dollars. The interface is clean and intuitive. The biggest learning curve is understanding how to read the liquidity and order book depth on less-traded markets, where large bets can move prices significantly.
The Bottom Line
Polymarket is one of the most intellectually interesting platforms in finance. It is a live experiment in whether markets can aggregate human knowledge better than any other mechanism we've designed. The early evidence suggests: yes, they often can.
But it occupies a genuinely uncomfortable space between investing, speculation, and gambling — and different jurisdictions are resolving that discomfort in different ways. Some are banning it outright. Some are trying to regulate it. Some are watching from the sidelines.
What is clear is that prediction markets are not going away. The demand for honest, skin-in-the-game forecasting is real. Whether Polymarket specifically, or some future regulated successor, ends up as the infrastructure for that market is the question worth watching.
In the meantime, the odds are there to trade — if you can access them.
