World Cup prediction markets hit $2B before kickoff as Spain and France go head to head

World Cup prediction markets hit B before kickoff as Spain and France go head to head

The FIFA World Cup has become a multibillion-dollar trading event before its June 11 kickoff, with prediction-market traders nearly split on whether Spain or France should be treated as the team to beat in the tournament.

Polymarket data show Spain and France each trading near a 16% implied chance of winning the tournament, ahead of England at about 11%, Portugal at 10%, and defending champion Argentina at 9%.

Prices on Kalshia regulated US-trading venue, show a similar race at the top, with Spain near 16.5%, France at 16.2%, Portugal at 10.5%, England at 10.1%, and Argentina at 8.9%.

World Cup Bets on PolymarketWorld Cup Bets on Polymarket
World Cup Bets on Polymarket (Source: Polymarket)

These numbers are not forecasts in the traditional sense, as they reflect where traders are willing to buy and sell event contracts that pay out if a team wins the tournament.

Still, the size of the market has turned the 2026 FIFA World Cup into an early test of whether prediction platforms can compete with sportsbooks during one of the most-watched sporting events in the world.

Already, Polymarket’s World Cup winner market has generated roughly $2 billion in trading volume before the tournament begins, while Kalshi’s comparable market has crossed $100 million.

The figures place the event among the largest sports markets yet for prediction platforms, whose rapid growth has pushed them into territory long dominated by licensed gambling operators.

World Cup gives platforms their largest sports test

For Polymarket and Kalshi, the World Cup arrives at a pivotal moment.

The 2026 tournament is the first men’s World Cup since prediction markets moved beyond their earlier base in crypto, politics, and macroeconomic events into mainstream sports speculation.

The event gives the sector its largest sports test yet, with a global audience, 48 teams, 104 matches, and weeks of shifting narratives that can be turned into tradable contracts.

Historically, sportsbooks have always given fans a way to wager on teams and players. Prediction markets are newer and add a structure closer to financial trading, where users can enter, exit, trim, or increase positions before an event is resolved.

In simple terms, prediction markets allow users to buy and sell contracts tied to future events. A contract trading at 40 cents implies a 40% market-implied probability and pays $1 if the outcome occurs.

This means the prices can move as traders react to injuries, team news, match results, tactical changes, and other developments.

That flexibility is central to the surge in World Cup activity.

A trader who buys Spain before the opening match does not have to hold the position until the final in July. If Spain wins its group comfortably or receives a favorable knockout draw, the contract price could rise and allow the trader to sell before the tournament ends. If a key player is injured or the team faces a more difficult path, the position can be reduced before it settles at zero.

The same logic applies to France, Portugal, England, and Argentina, whose prices remain close enough to keep the market competitive. France’s squad depth, Spain’s recent form, England’s attack, Portugal’s Nations League momentum, and Argentina’s status as defending champion have all given traders competing cases to price.

That has helped turn the winner market into a live trading venue rather than a static pre-tournament betting board. Prices can adjust after each match, press conference, injury update, or disciplinary decision. The result is a tournament-long market that tracks changing sentiment as the field narrows.

However, that scale does not make the market immune to bias. Prediction markets can still reflect momentum, public attention, fan loyalty, and uneven access to information.

For context, a national team with a large global following may draw more trading interest than a less popular side with a similar chance of winning. Traders can also overreact to short-term developments in a tournament where one injury, suspension, or red card can reshape the path to the final.

Still, the activity shows how sports have become a major growth channel for event-contract platforms.

Pew Research Center found that combined monthly global trading volume on Kalshi and Polymarket rose from less than $5 billion in September 2025 to about $24 billion in April 2026. That compares with about $14 billion in average monthly legal sportsbook wagers in the US last year.

Sports have been especially important for Kalshi, where they have accounted for the bulk of trading volume since the platform expanded beyond politics and macroeconomic events. Polymarket’s activity is spread more broadly across sports, politics, and crypto, but the World Cup shows how a single global event can concentrate liquidity across one set of contracts.

In view of this, several crypto companies, including President Donald Trump-related firms, are now trying to tap into that demand.

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