A Decentralized Prediction Market (DPM) is an exchange built on blockchain technology that allows participants to trade on the outcomes of future real-world events. [1] [2] These platforms operate as information aggregation tools, where the market price of a share representing a specific outcome reflects the collective belief about its probability. [3] By using smart contracts instead of a central intermediary, DPMs facilitate the creation, trading, and settlement of event-based wagers in a transparent, globally accessible, and censorship-resistant manner. [4]
Decentralized Prediction Markets are designed to harness collective intelligence by creating a financial incentive for participants to reveal and back their true beliefs about future events. [4] The underlying principle, related to the Efficient Market Hypothesis, suggests that the prices of tradable shares will quickly incorporate all available information, making the market an effective real-time forecasting tool. [5] Participants buy and sell shares tied to "Yes" or "No" propositions, or to one of several possible outcomes. If their prediction is correct, their shares pay out at a fixed value; if incorrect, the shares become worthless. [1]
The topics for prediction can span a wide range of categories, including political elections, sports results, economic indicators, scientific developments, and crypto-specific events like network upgrades. [3] The decentralized architecture, built upon public blockchains like Ethereum, Polygon, and Solana, ensures that all transactions and market rules are transparent and auditable, distinguishing these platforms from opaque, traditional betting systems. [6]
The operation of a decentralized prediction market is governed by a series of automated, pre-defined rules encoded in smart contracts.
The lifecycle of a prediction market typically follows several key steps:
A central feature of prediction markets is that the market price of an outcome share is a direct, real-time indicator of its perceived probability. Share prices typically range from 1.00. For example, if a "YES" share for an event is trading at 0.30, reflecting a 30% perceived probability. This dynamic allows anyone to gauge market sentiment at a glance. [3]
There are two main models for distributing winnings among participants:
DPMs are built on several key Web3 technologies that enable their trustless and automated operation.
Smart contracts are self-executing contracts with the terms of the agreement coded directly onto the blockchain. They are the backbone of DPMs, automating critical functions without needing an intermediary. Their responsibilities include defining market terms, holding participant funds in escrow, matching buyers and sellers (or interacting with a liquidity pool), and executing payouts automatically upon verification of the outcome. [3] [2]
All transactions and market rules are recorded on a public, immutable blockchain, providing a high degree of transparency and security. [2] This architecture also enables self-custody, meaning users retain control over their funds in their personal cryptocurrency wallets and interact with the platform's smart contracts directly. This reduces the counterparty risk associated with centralized platforms, which require users to deposit funds into company-controlled accounts. [4]
Since blockchains cannot natively access external, real-world data, they rely on services called oracles to report the outcomes of events. An oracle acts as a bridge, securely feeding off-chain information (like an election result or a sports score) to the smart contract to trigger its settlement. The reliability of the oracle is paramount; a compromised or faulty oracle can lead to incorrect market resolution and undermine the integrity of the platform. This vulnerability is known as the "Oracle Problem." Various DPMs use different oracle solutions, such as UMA's optimistic oracle used by Polymarket or Chainlink used by Overtime. [6] [4]
DPMs employ different models to facilitate the trading of outcome shares:
The concept of prediction markets in the crypto space began with early protocols like Augur and Gnosis on the Ethereum blockchain. [5] These platforms helped establish the core models for decentralized, on-chain event betting. The risks of centralized platforms were highlighted by the 2022 collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which had offered popular prediction markets on events like the U.S. presidential election. The exchange's bankruptcy left these markets unsettled, underscoring the value of decentralized, trustless alternatives where user funds are not held by a central operator. [4]
The market began a new phase of evolution in late 2025 with the entry of major regulated and corporate players, signaling a convergence of traditional finance and decentralized technology. On December 1, 2025, Kalshi, a CFTC-regulated exchange, announced it had launched tokenized versions of its event contracts on the Solana blockchain, bridging its centralized, regulated offerings with on-chain liquidity. [7] Just two days later, on December 3, 2025, sports merchandise and gaming giant Fanatics launched Fanatics Markets, a centralized prediction market app, in 10 U.S. states. [5]
The DPM ecosystem includes user-facing platforms as well as underlying infrastructure protocols that allow developers to build their own applications.