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Best Prediction Markets in 2026: The Complete Guide

Prediction markets have stopped being a niche crypto experiment for some time now, and they’ve ventured well into the mainstream. They’re even cited in political debates, news channels, and just about everywhere on social media.

Even regulated exchanges are competing with on-chain protocols for the same traders, and the biggest sportsbooks and brokerages have piled into the race.

In this guide, I’ll break down the five platforms that matter most right now: what each one is, how the trading actually works, what you pay in fees, and what makes each one special.

Best Prediction Markets in 2026: A Quick Rundown

We ranked the platforms on liquidity, market breadth, fees, access, regulation and custody, and the actual trading experience. Keep in mind every figure in this guide was checked against primary data in July 2026, including CFTC’s registries of designated exchanges, analytics dashboards, official fee schedules, company announcements, etc.

In a nutshell:

  1. Polymarket: best prediction market overall, with a record June and a regulated US arm
  2. Kalshi: best regulated US prediction exchange and the sector’s volume leader
  3. Limitless: best up-and-coming on-chain market, built on Base
  4. Myriad Markets: best media-native prediction market
  5. Azuro: best on-chain prediction infrastructure, powering over 50 apps
NameFeaturesRating
Polymarket
Polymarket
Best Overall
  • Deepest market liquidity
  • Self-custodial (USDC/Polygon)
  • CFTC-regulated US arm
  • Fee-free geopolitics markets

4.9/5
Kalshi
Kalshi
Best Regulated US
  • Massive $31.5B June volume
  • Fully CFTC-regulated exchange
  • Free ACH deposits & withdrawals
  • Available on Robinhood

4.8/5
Limitless
Limitless
Best Up-and-Coming
  • Rapid-fire short-term markets
  • No KYC, wallet onboarding
  • Zero maker fees across Base
  • Active regulatory ambition

4.6/5
Myriad Markets
Myriad Markets
Best Media-Native
  • Embedded inside media apps
  • Fully non-custodial setup
  • Standard Chainlink oracles
  • Ultra-low transaction fees

4.4/5
Azuro
Azuro
Best Infrastructure
  • Unified pooled liquidity layer
  • KYC-free at protocol level
  • Supports 50+ decentralized apps
  • Over $414M lifetime volume

4.5/5

Polymarket: Best Prediction Market Overall

Rating:

4.9/5
  • Over $10B traded in June 2026
  • Non-custodial wallet custody
  • Backed by ICE & X partnership
  • No maker fees for liquidity
  • Oracle resolution dispute risks
  • Thinner market selection in US
  • Wallet setup can confuse beginners

As a surprise to no one, Polymarket is the biggest prediction market in the world and the one that turned event trading into a spectator sport.

NYSE parent Intercontinental Exchange has committed up to $2 billion to the company at a valuation around $9 billion, X made Polymarket its official prediction market partner with odds piped into the feed alongside Grok analysis, and the company told CNBC in late June that annualized revenue had passed $1 billion.

Executives have confirmed a POLY token and an airdrop are coming, though nothing had launched as of July 2026.

The platform runs on Polygon and settles in USDC, with funds held in your own wallet. Since December 2025, it also operates a separate, CFTC-regulated US exchange, the product of its $112 million acquisition of licensed operator QCEX.

Trading works on a central order book. You basically buy Yes or No shares priced from 0.1 cent to 99.9 cents, with winning shares redeemable at $1, and you can exit any position before resolution. On the international venue, outcomes are decided by UMA’s optimistic oracle, where token holders confirm or dispute proposed results.

The US exchange requires full identity verification and resolves under its regulated rulebook.

Polymarket Fees

Fees are modest and skewed against takers:

  • International venue: takers pay a formula-based fee across 10 market categories, with the highest at 50/50 odds. Sports peak at 0.75% and crypto markets at 1.80%, while geopolitics markets remain fee-free. Makers pay nothing and earn a daily share of taker fees.
  • US venue: takers pay at most $1.50 per 100 contracts at 50 cents, and resting orders earn a small rebate.
  • No deposit or withdrawal fees on either venue beyond network gas.

Pros and Cons of Polymarket

Pros:

  • Deepest liquidity and market breadth of any prediction platform. Over $10B traded on the international venue in June 2026 alone
  • Self-custody: funds stay in your wallet (USDC on Polygon), no counterparty holding your balance
  • Now has a CFTC-regulated US arm after the QCEX acquisition, so US users have a legal on-ramp
  • Low fees: makers pay nothing, takers pay only on some categories, geopolitics markets are free
  • Institutional credibility, with ICE (NYSE’s parent) backing, official X partnership, $1B+ reported annualized revenue

Cons:

  • Oracle resolution risk: UMA disputes have flipped outcomes that looked settled (the $160M Zelensky suit market), and the fact that disputes still happen post-overhaul
  • The regulated US venue has a much thinner market list than the global one, and the global one blocks US users
  • Wallet-based onboarding still confuses newcomers used to normal fintech apps
  • Trustpilot reviewers cite account disablements without explanation and slow support

Kalshi: Best Regulated US Prediction Market

Rating:

4.8/5
  • Segregated US customer funds
  • Direct USD fiat on-ramps
  • Deep regulated US market menu
  • Supports institutional APIs
  • Mandatory KYC requirements
  • No crypto/self-custody support
  • Ongoing state-level sports lawsuits

Kalshi has been a CFTC-designated contract market since 2020.

In June alone, the platform was valued at $2B after its latest funding round. Its World Cup winner market alone attracted more than $1.4 billion.

It works quite similarly to Polymarket. You just deposit dollars, pass full KYC, and trade Yes/No contracts on an order book, from Fed decisions and inflation prints to sports and award shows.

Kalshi contracts are also reachable through brokers, which is how Robinhood users trade them. Once US-only, the exchange now accepts customers from around 143 countries, though it remains restricted in about 54 jurisdictions, including the UK, Canada and Australia.

Kalshi’s specialty could be the fact it offers the deepest regulated market menu in the US, institutional-grade APIs, and the confidence of trading on a federally supervised venue.

The drawbacks? Depends on how you see it, but the design obviously carries KYC on everything, no self-custody (and the fact there’s an ongoing legal war over its sports contracts, with several states and tribal groups challenging them in court, but it’s the same with Polymarket).

Kalshi Fees

Fees are taker-only on most markets and depend on price: roughly 7 cents to $1.75 per 100 contracts, most expensive at 50/50 odds and cheapest at the extremes. Most resting orders pay nothing, there are no settlement or membership fees, and ACH deposits and withdrawals are free.

Pros and Cons of Kalshi

Pros:

  • Sector volume leader: $31.5B in June 2026, roughly triple Polymarket’s international venue
  • Full federal oversight as a CFTC-designated exchange since 2020; customer funds in segregated accounts
  • Fiat-native: free ACH deposits and withdrawals, no crypto knowledge needed, clean purpose-built app
  • Reachable through brokers like Robinhood, and now open to users in roughly 143 countries

Cons:

  • Depending on how much you value your privacy, there’s basically KYC on everything and no self-custody
  • The ongoing legal war over sports contracts: blocked or contested in several states (Nevada injunction in force, losses in Maryland, Ohio, New York), as we mentioned.
  • Fees peak at 50/50 odds, which is exactly where most action is

Limitless: Best Up-and-Coming On-Chain Market

Rating:

4.6/5
  • 15-min crypto price contracts
  • Smooth Base network settlement
  • Features LMTS token utility
  • AMM & order-book hybrid
  • Strictly prohibits US users
  • Airdrop points inflate activity
  • Thinner liquidity outside crypto

Limitless is one of the fastest-growing crypto-native prediction markets, and it looks nothing like Polymarket.

Built on Base, it leans into rapid-fire trading: hourly and 15-minute crypto price markets alongside daily and longer-dated questions.

Trading is wallet-based with no default KYC, settled in USDC on Base. Most markets run on a central order book, with an AMM handling some of the rest. Getting started takes a wallet and a deposit, and there is no account approval process.

Limitless Fees

The fee model rewards liquidity providers:

  • Makers pay nothing across the board.
  • AMM markets charge a flat 0.40%.
  • Order-book buys cost 0.40% to 3.00% depending on price, and sells 0.42% to 1.50%, peaking at 50/50 odds.
  • Taker fees on the short-duration crypto markets are currently rebated 100% to makers.

Its LMTS token went live in October 2025, and in May 2026 the team filed an application with the CFTC to launch a regulated US exchange offering five-minute Bitcoin event contracts, which is still pending.

Pros and Cons of Limitless

Pros:

  • Fastest-growing on-chain venue: 61,808 monthly active traders in June, from double digits in early 2024
  • Rapid-fire markets nobody else offers at scale: hourly and 15-minute crypto price contracts on Base
  • No KYC, wallet-in-and-trade onboarding; makers pay zero fees and short-duration taker fees are currently rebated to makers
  • Serious regulatory ambition: CFTC application filed May 2026 for regulated 5-minute BTC contracts; LMTS token already live

Cons:

  • US users are just outright prohibited by its terms of service
  • Activity metrics are flattered by airdrop-points seasons. Team-reported volume ($3.4B) runs well above independent measurement ($1.7B), something to keep in mind
  • Unsurprisingly, liquidity can be thin next to Polymarket and Kalshi, especially outside crypto markets
  • Order-book trading on short timeframes has a real learning curve for casual users

Myriad Markets: Best Media-Native Prediction Market

Rating:

4.4/5
  • Predict while reading articles
  • Backed by Hack VC & Jump
  • No identity checks needed
  • Easy casual user onboarding
  • Thin overall exit liquidity
  • Lacks advanced trading tools
  • Fragmented across three chains

Myriad is a bit of an outlier here, and we could even say it takes the opposite approach to everyone else on this list. So, instead of building a destination exchange, it just embeds prediction markets where audiences already are.

The platform was built by DASTAN, the company formed by the merger of crypto publisher Decrypt and Rug Radio, and its markets appear inside articles, apps and games rather than on a standalone trading screen.

It’s essentially a non-custodial AMM where outcome prices always sum to $1. Markets live on Abstract, BNB Chain and Linea, funds stay in your own wallet, no KYC is required, and Chainlink serves as the official oracle, including for its World Cup markets.

Myriad Fees

Fees are light and simple:

  • Buys carry a 0% to 2% fee depending on the market, plus a flat $0.0085 per transaction that covers gas.
  • Fees are shared between liquidity providers, the protocol and the builders who integrate it.

Pros and Cons of Myriad Markets

Pros:

  • Unique distribution: markets embedded directly in content and apps (built by DASTAN, Decrypt’s parent), so you predict where you already read
  • Non-custodial and KYC-free, with cheap, simple fees (0 to 2% plus a flat $0.0085 per transaction)
  • Chainlink as the official oracle, a more standardized resolution setup than most small venues
  • Credible backing: $20M pre-Series A in Feb 2026 from Hack VC and Jump Crypto; 430K+ users within two months of mainnet

Cons:

  • Small on-chain footprint; many markets feel thin and exit liquidity can be poor
  • More an engagement product than a trading venue (serious traders will outgrow it)
  • Spread across three chains (Abstract, BNB Chain, Linea), which fragments the experience
  • Relatively a young platform with limited track record on contested resolutions

Azuro: Best On-Chain Prediction Infrastructure

Rating:

4.5/5
  • No liquidity fragmentation
  • Multiple frontends like DexWin
  • Earn shares of pool revenue
  • Polygon, Base & Arbitrum support
  • No primary destination app
  • Indirect fees via odds spreads
  • Highly skewed to sports betting

Azuro is technically not a prediction market, but more like a liquidity layer that prediction and betting frontends build on. In other words, the protocol hosts markets and pooled liquidity in smart contracts, and every app plugged into it shares that same pool: a bet placed on one frontend draws from the same liquidity as a bet on another.

In practice you use Azuro through those frontends. bookmaker.XYZ was the first independent one, DexWin offers a gasless sportsbook experience, PinWin extends Azuro liquidity to Solana users, etc.

Builders earn a share of pool profits generated by their own users, which is why new frontends keep appearing.

Azuro fees

There is no maker/taker fee schedule to compare. Costs sit inside the odds spread, the way a bookmaker builds margin into its prices, so the practical move is to compare quoted odds across frontends rather than hunt for a fee page.

Note that your experience depends on whichever frontend you choose and on the protocol’s scale, while real, is modest compared to the consumer giants above.

Pros and Cons of Azuro

Pros:

  • It has quite a robust infrastructure, reaching well above $414M in all-time volume, $5.1M protocol revenue, and at least 54 apps built on its shared liquidity layer so far
  • One pooled liquidity base across every frontend, so even new apps launch with usable depth
  • Permissionless and KYC-free at the protocol level, live across Polygon, Gnosis, Base and Arbitrum
  • Choice of experiences: sportsbook-style (bookmaker.XYZ, DexWin) or Solana-friendly (PinWin) without fragmenting liquidity

Cons:

  • Not a destination app; quality of your experience depends entirely on the frontend you pick
  • No transparent fee schedule; costs hide in the odds spread, so comparing value takes effort
  • Sports-heavy in practice, with less breadth in politics and culture markets
  • Modest scale overall next to the consumer giants, and the protocol’s TVL has been drifting down

What Are Prediction Markets?

Prediction markets let you trade contracts on the outcome of real-world events: elections, sports, interest rates, crypto prices, even award shows.

Each market has Yes and No shares priced between 1 cent and 99 cents, and the price doubles as a probability. So, if Yes trades at 60 cents, the market collectively thinks the event has about a 60% chance of happening. The idea is pretty simple: correct shares redeem at $1 when the market resolves and wrong ones expire worthless.

You can also sell at any time before resolution and lock in a profit or cut a loss.

And how different is it from sports betting? Well, you trade against other people rather than a bookmaker, prices move like any market, and you can exit early instead of riding a bet to the end.

Risks to Know Before You Trade

In July 2025, a Polymarket market asking whether Ukraine’s president would wear a suit before July drew roughly $160 million in wagers and resolved No after nine days of oracle disputes, despite plenty of media outlets describing his NATO summit outfit as exactly that.

UMA overhauled how Polymarket resolutions are proposed afterward, but disputed markets have surfaced again since, including a $16 million market that spent weeks in dispute limbo in April 2026. On any oracle-resolved platform, read the resolution rules before you size a position.

CryptoPotato once covered a report from the WSJ that claimed Polymarket paid college-age creators to stage up to $1.9 million in fake bets, and that the majority of the winning bets, and the reason for the platform’s viral growth, had to do with copycat versions of its website.

Regulation is another front, particularly for Kalshi’s sports contracts. They have won in some courts, including a federal appeals ruling in its favor, and lost in others, with courts in Maryland, Ohio, Nevada and New York siding against it as of early July 2026.

Why Trust CryptoPotato

As we always say, CryptoPotato is a veteran cryptocurrency-focused media outlet, and we cover the industry since 2016.

Every figure in this guide was verified against primary sources, including registry of designated

exchanges, official fee documentation, and raw data from sources and company statements.

We carefully examine each narrative and its triggers (as well as effects) to bring you the full picture.

FAQ

Are prediction markets legal in the US?

Trading on CFTC-designated exchanges such as Kalshi, Polymarket US, and Crypto.com’s derivatives venue is federally regulated and legal.

Keep in mind that sports event contracts remain contested, with several states and tribal groups challenging them in court, so availability can vary by state. Moreover, offshore and on-chain platforms generally block US users (or fall into a gray zone).

What is the difference between a prediction market and sports betting?

At a sportsbook, you bet against the house at fixed odds, whereas on a prediction market you trade against other people, prices float with the crowd’s information, and you can sell your position early.

The margin you pay is a visible fee or spread rather than odds shaded against you.

Which prediction market is best for crypto users?

Polymarket’s international venue offers the deepest on-chain liquidity and self-custody in USDC. Limitless is the pick for fast crypto price markets on Base, and Myriad is the easiest way to dip in casually without visiting an exchange at all.

How do prediction market odds work?

Prices and probabilities are the same thing, so a “Yes” share trading at 25 cents implies a 25% chance, and if the event happens, it pays out $1, quadrupling your money.

That also means the market updates in real time: when news breaks, the price moves before most headlines do, which is why traders treat these markets as a live probability feed as much as a way to bet.

Conclusion: Best Prediction Markets in 2026

Prediction markets have managed to evolve far beyond a crypto niche – as we established in this guide. They offer a sophisticated way to trade on everything from politics to macroeconomics and sports. Whether you prioritize deep liquidity, regulatory oversight, self-custody, or fast-moving crypto markets, there’s definitely a platform that’s tailored to your trading style.

Just remember that regardless of the platform you choose, you have to understand the rules that govern market resolution, the fee structure, as well as any possible jurisdiction restrictions – this is just as important as identifying opportunities.

As our industry continues to mature, informed users will be better positioned to take advantage of this rapidly expanding market.

Gönderi Best Prediction Markets in 2026: The Complete Guide ilk olarak şurada yayınlandı CryptoPotato.


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