Legal · 9 min read
Are prediction markets legal in the US?
The CFTC, the states, and the live legal questions shaping access in 2025.
Updated July 2026 · HunchMarkets editorial
Federally regulated event contracts are legal in the United States. State-level treatment, especially of sports markets, is contested.
The short answer
A prediction market is an exchange where people trade Yes or No contracts on whether a real-world event will occur. The price of a Yes contract — typically between one and ninety-nine cents — is the market's collective estimate of the probability that the event will happen.
Why this matters
Prediction markets compress crowd information into a single, machine-readable price. When the price of "Fed cuts rates in December" moves from 55 cents to 72 cents, it reflects a real, financially-backed shift in expectations — not a poll, not a pundit, not a tweet.
How the mechanics work
Every contract resolves to either one dollar or zero based on a verifiable outcome. Buyers of Yes pay the current price and receive one dollar if the event occurs. Buyers of No pay the complementary price (one minus the Yes price) and receive one dollar if it doesn't. Exchanges match buyers and sellers continuously, like a stock market.
An example
Suppose a market on "S&P 500 closes above 6,200 by year-end" is trading at 41 cents. Buying a Yes contract costs 41 cents. If the index does close above 6,200, the contract pays one dollar — a 144% return on the premium. If it doesn't, the contract pays zero, and the entire 41 cents is lost.
Where this fits
Prediction markets sit at the intersection of derivatives and information markets. In the United States, the regulated venues — Kalshi, ForecastEx and others — operate under CFTC oversight as Designated Contract Markets. Offshore venues like Polymarket are not legally accessible to US residents today.
What to do next
- Read our ranking of the best US platforms to decide where to open an account.
- Check your state legality page before depositing funds.
- Explore the glossary for terms you'll see across every platform.
Keep reading
Related guides
Beginner
What is a prediction market?
A plain-English guide to how prediction markets price the probability of real-world events.
Beginner
How event contracts work
Yes/No contracts, settlement, premiums and what "a price of 62 cents" actually means.
Comparison
Prediction markets vs sportsbooks: the vig gap explained
Sportsbooks bake a 4.5–10% vigorish into every line. Regulated prediction markets typically charge under 2%. Here's what that means for your edge.
