Polymarket has kicked off 2026 facing a new slew of regulatory actions from jurisdictions in Europe and the U.S., even as it edges its way back into the American market.
On Friday, both the Hungarian Supervisory Authority for Regulated Activities and the Portuguese Gaming Regulatory Authority issued bans against the prediction market, accusing it of illegal gambling activity.
“The website is not authorized to offer betting in Portugal, and under national law, betting on political events or happenings, whether national or international, is not permitted,” Portuguese regulators told local outlet Rádio Renascença.
The same day, the Nevada Gaming Control Board filed a civil enforcement action against Polymarket, asking the court “for a declaration and injunction to stop Polymarket from offering unlicensed wagering.” Its actions follow a similar one in Tennessee earlier this month, when the state’s sports betting regulator ordered Polymarket, Kalshi, and Crypto.com to shut down their sports prediction markets and refund wagers.
Prediction markets have exploded in popularity over the last two years, particularly ahead of the U.S. presidential election in 2024. The markets, including top players Polymarket and its main competitor, Kalshi, are seeing combined volumes of over $13.5 billion monthly and processing over 43 million transactions, according to a November 2025 report by Dune and Keyrock. (Disclaimer: Decrypt’s parent company Dastan operates prediction market platform Myriad.)
The controversy surrounding them hinges on the claim by prediction markets that they are not gambling platforms. In April, the CEO of Kalshi—which is also facing a class action lawsuit in the Southern District of New York, filed last week, which contends it operates as an “illegal and unlicensed sports book”—Tarek Mansour told Axios that prediction markets offer “events contracts,” not bets.
Tennessee Demands Polymarket, Kalshi and Crypto.com End Sports Prediction Markets
“I just don’t really know what this has to do with gambling. If we are gambling, then I think you’re basically calling the entire financial market gambling,” he said at the time, describing the market as “an open financial marketplace” where people trade against each other instead of betting against a sportsbook.
But regulators beg to differ.
Further compounding the issue is that in many places, betting on the outcome of political events is illegal—including in Portugal and also Taiwan, where Polymarket users have been investigated for betting on the outcome of the most recent presidential elections.
