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How Prediction Markets Resolve: Settlement Explained

What happens when a prediction market closes? Learn about resolution sources, dispute mechanisms, and how Polymarket settles markets using the UMA Oracle.

James Carlton
Crypto Analyst — On-Chain Flows · · 2 min read
✓ Fact-checked · 📅 Updated 1 May 2026 · 2 min read
PolyGram
Trending · Politics · Sports · Crypto
FIFA World Cup 2026
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2028 Dem Nominee
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ETH > $8k EOY
33%
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Key takeaway: Prediction markets resolve when a designated oracle or resolution source confirms the outcome. On Polymarket, the UMA Oracle handles settlement with a propose-dispute mechanism that prevents manipulation. Most markets settle within hours of the event outcome.

You acquired YES contracts at $0.40. The underlying event concluded. What happens next? Grasping how prediction markets resolve matters fundamentally — because the settlement mechanism dictates whether and when your winnings arrive. Here's what you ought to understand.

The resolution process on Polymarket

Polymarket employs the UMA (Universal Market Access) Oracle for decentralised resolution:

  1. Event occurs: The real-world event reaches its conclusion (election results certified, game finishes, data published)
  2. Proposal: A "proposer" submits the outcome to the UMA Oracle, staking a bond (in UMA tokens)
  3. Challenge window: A 2-hour period where anyone can dispute the proposed outcome by posting a counter-bond
  4. If undisputed: The proposed outcome becomes final. Winning shares pay $1.00; losing shares pay $0.00
  5. If disputed: UMA token holders vote on the correct outcome. This takes 24-48 hours
  6. Payout: USDC is automatically distributed to winning share holders

Resolution sources

Each Polymarket market specifies its resolution source upfront. Common sources include:

  • Official government data: Election results from state secretaries, BLS economic reports
  • News wire services: AP, Reuters for breaking news outcomes
  • Price feeds: CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap for crypto price milestones
  • Sports authorities: FIFA, UEFA, NFL for sports outcomes
  • Scientific publications: Peer-reviewed papers or agency announcements for science markets

Edge cases and ambiguity

Not every market settles without complications. Frequent issues involve:

  • Ambiguous wording: "Will X happen by 2026?" — does that mean by Jan 1 or Dec 31?
  • Event cancellation: What happens if a scheduled event is postponed indefinitely?
  • Partial outcomes: A bill passes the House but not the Senate — how does "Will Congress pass X?" resolve?

Polymarket mitigates these through granular resolution criteria embedded in each market's specification. Always examine the conditions thoroughly before committing capital.

How other platforms resolve

Platform Resolution method Dispute mechanism
PolymarketUMA Oracle (decentralised)Token holder vote
KalshiInternal resolution teamCFTC-regulated appeal
BetfairBetfair rules committeeCustomer service appeal
AugurREP token oracleEscalating bonds + fork

Tips for resolution-aware trading

  • Examine the resolution criteria before purchasing — unclear specifications heighten settlement uncertainty
  • Monitor the UMA dispute dashboard for contested markets
  • Incorporate settlement timeframes into your yield projections (a 10% gain over 6 months is ~20% annualised)

Trade markets with transparent resolution criteria on PolyGram. Start trading on PolyGram →

James Carlton
Crypto Analyst — On-Chain Flows

James covers DeFi research and writes for PolyGram on USDC flows, the Polymarket Polygon order book, and conditional-token mechanics.