Prediction market trading tied to the 2026 World Cup surged to a record 7.18 billion USD in the tournament’s opening week, as Polymarket, Kalshi, and Predict.fun captured a wave of global activity and turned football results into one of the busiest trading periods the sector has seen.
Record volumes driven by World Cup demand
Aggregated industry data shows the three platforms led the spike as traders rapidly priced match outcomes, team progress, and tournament winners. Polymarket alone generated 1.18 million USD in 24-hour revenue, surpassing Hyperliquid’s 814,900 USD over the same period. Its World Cup markets have processed more than 1.7 billion USD since kickoff, including a single-day peak of 63 million USD.
Even before the first match began, combined trading on winner contracts across Polymarket and Kalshi had already exceeded 2 billion USD. By mid-June, Polymarket’s World Cup winner market alone had drawn over 2.1 billion USD in volume, compared with roughly 200 million USD on Kalshi, highlighting how different user bases are allocating capital.
Platform strategies shape market share
Polymarket focused on liquidity, deploying a 1 million USD incentive program to deepen order books rather than offering bonus pools. Partnerships with football organizations such as OneFootball and Liga MX expanded its reach, reinforcing its position as a primary venue for blockchain-based price discovery during major sporting events.
Kalshi, operating under U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission oversight, recorded 1.09 billion USD in notional daily sports trading and maintained levels above 1 billion USD for two consecutive sessions. Data indicates more than 80% of its volume since mid-2024 has been linked to sports contracts, showing the category’s dominance on regulated platforms.
Predict.fun took a different approach, using gamification and rewards. Its 2 million USD “Predict Cup” incentive pool and integration with a major digital wallet ecosystem helped drive rapid user growth. Within three days of kickoff, daily active users reached 20,000, alongside more than 180,000 daily transactions. Rewards include a 260,000 USD final match payout and additional token-based incentives.
Regulation provides clearer framework
Recent guidance from the CFTC has played a key role in shaping activity. The regulator signaled that contracts tied to objective outcomes such as match results, scores, and tournament progression fall within acceptable boundaries, while those linked to referee decisions or player-specific incidents face tighter scrutiny.
A proposal released on June 10 further clarified that outcome-based sports contracts are unlikely to be considered against the public interest. Officials emphasized balancing market integrity with “responsible innovation,” reinforcing confidence in regulated offerings like Kalshi.
Early results trigger rapid repricing
Unexpected match outcomes in the opening round have already driven volatility. A 0-0 draw between Spain and Cape Verde and Belgium’s 1-1 result against Egypt forced immediate adjustments across contracts tied to tournament favorites, showing how quickly prices react to on-field performance rather than pre-tournament expectations.
These shifts underline the real-time nature of prediction markets, where probabilities are continuously recalibrated as new information emerges.
Broader market backdrop contrasts with surge
The surge in sports-related trading comes amid weaker conditions in digital asset markets. Bitcoin fell below 63,000 USD in early June, while Bitcoin ETFs recorded 2.97 billion USD in net outflows, marking a significant drop in institutional demand.
Despite this, prediction markets have shown resilience, with World Cup activity converting global viewership into sustained transaction flows rather than short-lived speculation.
Outlook for the tournament
With only the first round of group matches completed, trading activity is expected to intensify as knockout stages approach and uncertainty increases. Higher volatility, combined with established liquidity and clearer regulatory guidelines, is likely to drive further growth in both volume and participation.
Early data suggests global sporting events are evolving into reliable engines for prediction market expansion, providing measurable benchmarks for both decentralized and regulated platforms.
Want to trade major events like the World Cup? Explore Toobit’s event contracts in our prediction markets guide.
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