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Polymarket’s U.S. Ban Bypassed: $571 Million in American Political Bets

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The figure is stark: U.S.-linked wallets accounted for $571 million in political contract trading on Polymarket over the last twelve months, according to the original report . That outpaces every other country even though the platform is legally barred from serving users in the United States. The volume tilts heavily toward foreign-conflict markets — contract types that American venues cannot list. For a crypto prediction market that settled with regulators and then tried to wall off American IPs, the data suggests the enforcement wall is more like a screen door.

Polymarket reached a settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in January 2022, agreeing to pay a $1.4 million penalty and block U.S. users from accessing its binary options-style markets. The platform geo-fenced American IP addresses, but the new numbers make clear that the restriction has not stopped dedicated traders. VPNs and decentralized front-ends have allowed users to route around the block, and on-chain analysis of wallet activity now provides the clearest picture yet of how much U.S. money continues to flow in. This isn’t a small fringe; it’s the largest single national cohort by trading volume on the platform’s political markets.

The Politics of Foreign Conflict Markets

The CoinDesk report notes that the money leans toward foreign-conflict markets, a category that includes contracts tied to geopolitical tensions, foreign election interference, and military outcomes. Domestic U.S. venues face strict licensing rules that keep such contracts off regulated exchanges, but decentralized prediction markets have no comparable gatekeeper. Traders appear to be using Polymarket as a proxy for risks they cannot express elsewhere, and the $571 million figure indicates that the appetite is not merely speculative. It reflects a demand for real-time political hedging that the regulated financial system is not meeting.

What makes this particularly significant is the timing. The data arrives as Congress debates a sweeping crypto market structure bill that could reshape how decentralized platforms are treated under U.S. law. Earlier this year, banks pushed to derail the legislation , arguing that it did not adequately segregate traditional finance from the risks of decentralized protocols. If the bill passes in anything like its current form, platforms like Polymarket could face far clearer compliance obligations, but whether enforcement will be any more effective against geographic bypasses is an open question.

The broader tokenization of real-world assets has already pushed the boundaries of on-chain financial activity. Tokenized treasuries and private credit have crossed $20 billion in value, and major institutions are settling trades on public blockchains. Prediction markets represent a parallel frontier—one where retail traders, not just institutions, are voting with their wallets. The $571 million in U.S.-originated political bets underscores that American capital will route through permissionless systems when permissioned ones shut the door.

Can the Ban Ever Work?

The CFTC does not publicly comment on enforcement matters, but the persistence of U.S. trading on Polymarket raises uncomfortable questions about the practicality of geographic bans in crypto. Unlike a centralized exchange, Polymarket runs on a blockchain where settlement occurs in stablecoins, and user funds are held in smart contracts. A determined user only needs a wallet and a way to obscure their IP. Even aggressive enforcement against VPN endpoints can quickly become a game of whack-a-mole, and on-chain transaction data is public but pseudonymous—linking wallets to national identities requires off-chain investigation.

What remains uncertain is whether the CFTC or Justice Department will pursue action against large U.S. traders directly, rather than just the platform. The agency has historically gone after exchanges for serving U.S. persons, not individual users. But as the volumes grow, so does political pressure. If election-related markets attract billions in U.S. liquidity ahead of a contentious political cycle, the current hands-off approach could change. For now, the data suggests a simple truth: American political appetite is finding its way onto Polymarket, and the geoblock looks less like a legal barrier than a speed bump.

A Market That Won’t Be Contained

The $571 million figure is not an outlier. It represents a sustained pattern of user behavior across a full year. Polymarket’s total trading volume has grown as credible macro events create natural demand for prediction contracts, and U.S. traders have been at the center of that growth despite the official prohibition. The foreign-conflict tilt also hints at an under-explored dynamic: regulated U.S. markets so thoroughly avoid political risk that traders are forced to overseas and on-chain venues. That structural gap is unlikely to close soon, because the U.S. regulatory framework still treats many politically themed financial contracts as essentially illegal or too sensitive to license.

If the goal of the CFTC settlement was to cut off U.S. retail from prediction markets, the $571 million in trading says that goal has not been met. The resilience of blockchain-based platforms against traditional geofencing is not a new story, but the sheer scale now attached to it changes the conversation. What was once a theoretical compliance problem is now a measurable, multi-hundred-million-dollar reality. For policymakers, platform operators, and traders watching the space, the Polymarket data is a reminder that in an age of on-chain rails and globally accessible smart contracts, the old tools of restriction often fail quietly, and at considerable volume.

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