Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Polymarket (via Who Will Win 2026) Pick polygram.ink (preferred broker) |
97% | 3% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | See live odds → |
Polymarket (direct) polymarket.com |
97% | 3% | 0% | Geo-blocked in US/UK/EU | USDC, on-chain | See live odds → |
Kalshi kalshi.com |
— | — | Up to 7% per trade | US-only, KYC required | USD | See live odds → |
Betfair Exchange betfair.com |
— | — | 2-5% commission | Full KYC from first trade | GBP / EUR | See live odds → |
Manifold Markets manifold.markets |
— | — | Play-money (mana) | None — play-money | Mana (no cash-out) | See live odds → |
Outcome probabilities
Current market-implied probability for each outcome, from the live order book.
| Outcome | Probability |
|---|---|
| August 31 | 97% |
| July 31 | 81% |
| Successful splash down? | 78% |
| Super Heavy booster explodes? | 76% |
| July 23 | 44% |
| July 20 | 36% |
| Chopsticks catch Super Heavy booster? | 1% |
| July 16 | 1% |
| July 17 | 1% |
| June 30 | 0% |
| July 15 | 0% |
Market context
SpaceX’s thirteenth Starship test flight, intended to deploy 20 V3 Starlink satellites and attempt a second V3 ship splashdown, was cleanly aborted at T‑0 on 16 July 2026 when several engines failed to start [2][4]. The crowd-implied probability of a successful outcome sits at 0% YES, reflecting the immediate abort and the absence of a confirmed re‑try window. Historically, early Starship flights have shown high volatility: Flight 1 ended in vehicle breakup after an ascent engine shutdown [14], while Flight 5 achieved the first booster catch and a ship splashdown, establishing a pattern where initial failures are often followed by rapid iteration and eventual success. In that context, a 0% market price may be overly punitive, as the abort appears technical rather than systemic, and SpaceX has previously recovered from similar setbacks within days [2].
Traders should watch for an official re‑try announcement from SpaceX and any updated FAA launch clearance, as the primary window opened on 15 July with a backup on 16 July, and the booster rollback after static fire could push liftoff to the week of 20 July in a conservative scenario [7][13]. Key catalysts include confirmation that Booster 20 and Ship 40 have cleared post‑abort inspections, the timing of the next countdown, and any updates on the engine‑start fault that triggered the abort [2]. With the consensus anchored on the failed attempt, value may lie on the contrarian angle that a successful Flight 13 remains likely once the specific engine issue is resolved, given SpaceX’s rapid test cadence and the flight’s role as the second Block 3 test [1][7].
Methodology
This page reviews SpaceX Starship Flight Test 13 across five venues. The live probability is the Polymarket mid-price, sourced directly from the on-chain Polygon order book; the comparison columns benchmark each venue on fee structure, KYC, settlement currency and payment rails. Every CTA routes to Who Will Win 2026, which mirrors the Polymarket order book at 0% fees.
Resolution & payout
Settlement runs on-chain. Polymarket's contract logic separates YES and NO shares as conditional tokens; at resolution the winning share lifts to $1.00 and the losing one to $0. The outcome input comes from the UMA Optimistic Oracle, which secures against bad resolution with a bond + dispute window.
Once finalised, the smart contract pays USDC to the holders' wallets within minutes — no withdrawal fees beyond Polygon network gas. Kalshi settles in USD via CFTC clearance, Betfair in account currency net of commission, Manifold in play-money mana with no cash-out.
FAQ
- How does resolution work?
- Through the UMA Optimistic Oracle on Polygon: a proposer submits the outcome, a two-hour challenge window opens, and USDC payouts settle automatically once the result is final.
- What's the difference between YES and NO shares?
- A YES share pays $1.00 if the event happens, $0 otherwise. A NO share pays $1.00 if the event doesn't happen. The market price between 0¢ and 100¢ is the implied probability.
- What does Polymarket cost to trade?
- Polymarket itself charges 0% — the only cost is the Polygon network fee, typically under $0.01 per transaction. Off-chain venues like Kalshi or Betfair charge 2-7% commission.
- How fast are USDC deposits?
- Polygon credits deposits after 12 confirmations — usually under 30 seconds. Withdrawals follow the same path and land back in your wallet within minutes.
- Do I need to KYC for this market?
- On Polymarket directly, no — it's wallet-based. Intermediary brokers like Who Will Win 2026 trigger KYC only above $1,500 of lifetime trading volume; under that you trade pseudonymously with a single wallet address.
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