The world's largest prediction market, Polymarket, is starting to charge fees! Behind it is a calm game of regulation, survival, and timing.

1. It suddenly started charging you—but you probably didn’t even notice

You may have seen pages like these:

  • “Chance Trump wins the 2024 election: 51.3%”
  • “Chance the Fed cuts rates in March: 68.7%”
  • “LPL Spring Finals, BLG championship odds: 1.39”

This isn’t a gambling site, and it isn’t media commentary either. It’s a special thing in the Web3 world: a prediction market.

In simple terms, it’s a mechanism where you “vote” with real money. If you believe something will happen, you buy a “Yes” contract. If you believe it won’t happen, you buy a “No” contract. The price moves in real time, and the final number reflects the “collective judgment” formed by thousands of people putting their money behind it.

And Polymarket is currently the most popular, most actively traded, and most cited on-chain prediction platform worldwide. By offering a clean, simple website, it lets users trade directly with the USDC stablecoin.

On January 6, 2026, it quietly updated its official website. In the documentation, it added a page called “Trading Fees,” and announced that, starting immediately, markets of the “15-minute crypto asset up/down” type would charge a fee—up to 3%.

When the news broke, many long-time users’ first reaction was: “Huh? Wasn’t it free the whole time? Then what did it live on before?”

That question hits on a truth in the Web3 world that’s often overlooked: for a seemingly cool technical product to actually survive, it has never been just about code and ideals.

2. It went viral on hot topics—but survival is determined by regulation

Polymarket has indeed blown up multiple times:

  • In the 2022 Qatar World Cup, users bet on “Argentina to win,” and contract prices surged nonstop.
  • In the 2023 LPL Spring Finals, esports fans traded team win/loss in real time on the platform.
  • In the 2024 U.S. election, the peak daily trading volume exceeded $2.7 billion, and even The New York Times cited it as a source.

But what truly determines whether it can keep operating has never been those exciting events—it’s two words: regulation.

After being founded in 2020, Polymarket quickly gained backing from well-known venture capital firms such as Founders Fund, which is run by Peter Thiel. For a time, it even planned to roll out nationwide in the U.S. But then, in January 2022, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued an enforcement action that effectively halted it:

The binary contracts it offered—things like “Who wins: Real Madrid vs. Barcelona” or “Will the Fed cut rates”—fall under regulated swap transactions. They must obtain licenses for a “Designated Contract Market” (DCM) or a “Swap Execution Facility” (SEF)—which it did not have.

So what happened? Polymarket paid a $1.4 million penalty and shut down all compliant risk markets that were accessible to U.S. users. On the surface, it looked like it was exiting—but in practice, it was strategic contraction: moving the entity out of the U.S., switching funding rails to on-chain settlement, while keeping services open to the world—including U.S. users.

Interestingly, exiting the U.S. market actually helped it get more “mainstream.”

During the 2024 election, it became a kind of “unofficial dashboard” that global observers used to track changes in public sentiment. Before writing, media would check it; traders would reference it when modeling; researchers also pulled its API to analyze public emotion.

And the real turning point came in November 2025: the CFTC formally approved its DCM application. This means—it’s no longer “an innovation playing near the line,” but a company that has obtained a legitimate “official license” within the U.S. financial regulatory framework.

This new round of charging isn’t impulsive. It’s the first step after getting that “license.”

3. It was free for six years—not because it didn’t make money, but because it was waiting for a time to “earn with peace of mind”

You may not know this: the vast majority of prediction markets have already been charging fees for a long time—common rates range from 0.5% to 3%. But since Polymarket went live in 2020, it has charged zero fees for all users across all markets.

That naturally sparked a lot of speculation. Was it surviving on venture capital? Making money by selling data? Or did powerful backers cover the losses?

The truth is more pragmatic: it was betting on a time window.

The value of a prediction market isn’t how much profit you make per single trade. It’s whether there are enough people, and whether participation is frequent enough, to form real, stable, and credible price signals. And “zero fees” is the most direct and effective way to attract users.

Over six years, it managed to accomplish three things:

  • In high-attention events like politics, sports, and crypto, it became the de facto “default pricing center.”
  • Its price data was repeatedly cited by Bloomberg terminals, academic papers, and hedge fund strategy teams, turning it into a de facto standard.
  • It built up years of complete probability datasets spanning cycles, events, and regions—an moat that no new platform can buy by spending money.

In other words, it traded away the money it could have collected for more valuable assets: liquidity, influence, and data.

And the charging on January 6, 2026 is the natural outcome of that long-term plan:

  • Targeting only markets of the “15-minute crypto up/down” type—high-frequency, short-term, and easily influenced by bots.
  • Dynamic fee rates: the closer the price is to 50% (the harder it is to judge), the higher the fee; the closer it is to 0% or 100% (the clearer it is), the lower the fee—sometimes even zero.
  • All fees don’t go into the platform’s pocket. Instead, they’re fully returned daily in USDC to market makers (the people providing buy/sell quotes).
  • The goal is very practical: incentivize more orders, narrow the bid-ask spread, and enable fast execution even during sudden crashes or explosive rallies.

Some say it’s to combat high-frequency order-spam bots. Others think it’s to filter out fake trades. And others point out that—at its core, it’s a stress test: within the bounds of regulatory permission, verifying whether a fee mechanism can improve market quality without harming the user experience.

It didn’t become “more commercial”—it’s just finally able to “do business seriously.”

4. Small entry point, big upside; just started, already under pressure

Don’t underestimate the charging for this “one single category” alone.

According to data compiled on the Dune platform by on-chain analytics firm Gate Research:

  • Within the first two weeks after the fee launch, Polymarket had accumulated about $2.19 million in trading fees.
  • At the current pace, weekly revenue is about $730k. A static projection puts annualized revenue as high as $38 million.

This is only for the “15-minute crypto up/down” niche category. Polymarket’s current coverage includes:

  • U.S. and global political elections
  • Top sports events like the World Cup, the NBA, and the LPL
  • Macro events like FOMC meetings and CPI releases
  • Long-cycle topics such as cryptocurrencies, real estate, and AI technology progress

Profit potential is far from fully tapped. But the other side of the coin is this: compliance is never a one-and-done thing.

Getting the CFTC’s DCM license only means it passed a federal-level “exam.” But the U.S. is a federal country, and each state has the power to set its own financial and gambling regulations. In mid-January 2026, for example, Tennessee’s sports betting regulator issued a cease-and-desist order to Polymarket and similar platforms Kalshi, clearly requiring:

“Immediately stop offering sports event contracts to residents of this state, or face civil damages and even criminal charges.”

Similar challenges exist globally:

  • Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) explicitly classifies event contracts as prohibited business.
  • The U.K.’s FCA requires licensed operators + high-value margin + strict anti–money laundering reviews.
  • All prediction markets within mainland China are inaccessible, and policies explicitly prohibit them.

So Polymarket’s next step isn’t a sprint to expand—it’s ongoing adaptation:

  • Build localized compliance entities in different jurisdictions.
  • Define the product design boundary between “financial instruments” and “entertainment activities.”
  • Explore cooperation with traditional financial institutions to convert probability data into inputs for risk-control models.

Can it become a “evergreen tree” in the Web3 world? The answer isn’t whether the technology is advanced—it’s whether it can find a sustainable middle path among regulation, users, and business.

Prediction markets give us a rare perspective: when the world is full of uncertainty, at least we can know how many people around the world, right now, are willing to put real money behind “this will happen.”

This consensus may not be correct, but it’s real enough. And Polymarket’s charging isn’t the end of the story—it’s the moment it truly starts growing up as a real service.

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