Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PolyGram Pick polygram.ink |
3% | 97% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | Open on PolyGram → |
Polymarket polymarket.com |
3% | 97% | 0% | Geo-blocked in US/UK/EU | USDC, on-chain | Open on PolyGram → |
Kalshi kalshi.com |
— | — | Up to 7% per trade | US-only, KYC required | USD | Open on PolyGram → |
Betfair Exchange betfair.com |
— | — | 2-5% commission | Full KYC from first trade | GBP / EUR | Open on PolyGram → |
Manifold Markets manifold.markets |
— | — | Play-money (mana) | None — play-money | Mana (no cash-out) | Open on PolyGram → |
Live odds for Polymarket-based markets come from the Polygon order book. Non-Polymarket venues show attributes only; clicking any row opens the market on PolyGram.
Active sub-markets
Market context
Russia is due to hold State Duma elections in September 2026, and the market is pricing a very strong chance that the biggest seat gainer will not be the dominant party in absolute terms. At 3% YES, the crowd is effectively saying the lead party is highly likely to defend first place overall, but the relevant question is which party improves its seat tally the most versus its pre-election position. That framing matters in Russia, where United Russia already holds a large majority and even a modest recovery by a smaller party can outpace the incumbent’s limited room for gains.
The historical backdrop points to a familiar pattern: United Russia usually starts from a position of structural advantage, while opposition or satellite parties can record larger marginal seat gains simply because they are expanding from a lower base. Recent polling and market data suggest United Russia remains the clear favourite to win the election outright, with Polymarket putting it near 96% to finish first, yet the “most seats gained” market is trading much lower because the better handicapper’s angle is whether a smaller party can add more seats than the incumbent. New People has emerged as the main speculative challenger in this market, but that still depends on converting visibility into actual district and list gains rather than just vote share.
The key catalysts are the candidate nomination process, the final election timetable, and whether the Kremlin broadens or narrows the field of allowed competition. NEST Centre recently noted that voting is set for 18–20 September 2026 and that United Russia should retain its constitutional majority, which reinforces the favourite status in the main winner market but does not settle the seat-gain question. Traders should also watch any changes to constituency boundaries, the treatment of occupied territories, and the approval of new-list parties, since those procedural decisions can shift where marginal seat gains are available.
Methodology
We track Which party will gain most seats in Russian Parliamentary Election? on the five venues with material liquidity for prediction markets. Live odds come from the Polymarket Polygon order book — the only source that ships real-time data under an open licence. For Kalshi, Betfair and Manifold we list platform attributes (fee, KYC, settlement, payment) instead of fabricated odds, because their APIs use non-comparable contract definitions.
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 does it cost to trade on PolyGram?
- Zero. PolyGram routes every order to the live Polymarket order book; the only cost is the Polygon network fee, typically under $0.01 per transaction.
- 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?
- Not under $1,500 of lifetime trading volume. Above that threshold, PolyGram triggers a quick verification flow that finishes in minutes.
- How reliable are the quoted odds?
- The YES/NO percentages are the live mid-prices of the Polymarket order book. On deep markets they move every few seconds; on thinner ones you'll see short plateaus.
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