Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Polymarket (via March Madness Predictions) Pick polygram.ink (preferred broker) |
28% | 72% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | See live odds → |
Polymarket (direct) polymarket.com |
28% | 72% | 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 |
|---|---|
| Marine Le Pen | 28% |
| Édouard Philippe | 28% |
| Jean-Luc Mélenchon | 12% |
| Jordan Bardella | 4% |
| Gabriel Attal | 3% |
| Bruno Retailleau | 3% |
| François Hollande | 3% |
| Raphaël Glucksmann | 2% |
| Dominique de Villepin | 2% |
| Éric Zemmour | 1% |
| David Lisnard | 1% |
| Michel Barnier | 1% |
| Gérald Darmanin | 1% |
| Bernard Cazeneuve | 1% |
| Sarah Knafo | 1% |
| Sébastien Lecornu | 1% |
| Xavier Bertrand | 0% |
| Laurent Wauquiez | 0% |
| François Ruffin | 0% |
| Marine Tondelier | 0% |
| Fabien Roussel | 0% |
| Olivier Faure | 0% |
| Ségolène Royal | 0% |
| François Asselineau | 0% |
| Clémentine Autain | 0% |
| Nicolas Dupont-Aignan | 0% |
| Valérie Pécresse | 0% |
| François Bayrou | 0% |
| Élisabeth Borne | 0% |
| Yaël Braun-Pivet | 0% |
| Jean Castex | 0% |
| Carole Delga | 0% |
| Manuel Bompard | 0% |
| Mathilde Panot | 0% |
| Other | 0% |
| Juan Branco | 0% |
| Clémence Guetté | 0% |
| Person E | 0% |
| Person F | 0% |
| Person G | 0% |
| Person H | 0% |
| Person I | 0% |
| Person J | 0% |
| Person K | 0% |
| Person L | 0% |
| Person M | 0% |
| Person N | 0% |
| Person O | 0% |
| Person P | 0% |
| Person Q | 0% |
| Person R | 0% |
| Person S | 0% |
| Person T | 0% |
| Person U | 0% |
| Person V | 0% |
| Person W | 0% |
| Person X | 0% |
| Person Y | 0% |
| Person Z | 0% |
| Person AA | 0% |
| Person AB | 0% |
| Person AC | 0% |
| Person AD | 0% |
| Person AE | 0% |
| Person AF | 0% |
| Person AG | 0% |
| Person AH | 0% |
| Person AI | 0% |
| Person AJ | 0% |
| Person AK | 0% |
| Person AL | 0% |
| Person AM | 0% |
| Person AN | 0% |
| Person AO | 0% |
| Person AP | 0% |
| Person AQ | 0% |
| Person AR | 0% |
| Person AS | 0% |
| Person AT | 0% |
| Person AU | 0% |
| Person AV | 0% |
| Person AW | 0% |
| Person AX | 0% |
| Person AY | 0% |
| Person AZ | 0% |
| Person BA | 0% |
| Person BB | 0% |
| Person BC | 0% |
| Person BD | 0% |
| Person BE | 0% |
| Person BF | 0% |
| Person BG | 0% |
| Person BH | 0% |
| Person BI | 0% |
| Person BJ | 0% |
| Person BK | 0% |
| Person BL | 0% |
| Person BM | 0% |
| Person BN | 0% |
| Person BO | 0% |
| Person BP | 0% |
| Person BQ | 0% |
| Person BR | 0% |
| Person BS | 0% |
| Person BT | 0% |
| Person BU | 0% |
| Person BV | 0% |
| Person BW | 0% |
| Person BX | 0% |
| Person BY | 0% |
| Person BZ | 0% |
| Person CA | 0% |
| Person CB | 0% |
| Person CC | 0% |
| Person CD | 0% |
| Person CE | 0% |
| Person CF | 0% |
| Person CG | 0% |
| Person CH | 0% |
| Person CI | 0% |
| Person CJ | 0% |
| Person CK | 0% |
| Person CL | 0% |
| Person CM | 0% |
| Person CN | 0% |
| Person CO | 0% |
| Person CP | 0% |
| Person CQ | 0% |
Market context
France’s next presidential vote is scheduled for 18 April 2027, with a runoff on 2 May if no candidate secures over 50% in the first round. Incumbent Emmanuel Macron cannot run again due to constitutional term limits, opening the field to a crowded contest of 32 declared or potential candidates, including far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who confirmed her candidacy on 8 July despite an embezzlement conviction and a partial ban on public office [3][5].
Historically, French elections with an ineligible incumbent have produced volatile first rounds followed by decisive runoffs, as seen in 2017 when Macron defeated Le Pen after both topped the initial ballot. Current polls suggest Le Pen leads the first round and wins the runoff, yet the market’s 27% YES probability implies traders doubt her ability to overcome legal barriers or consolidate a broad coalition against a unified centre-left or centrist bloc [1][2]. This divergence mirrors 2002, when Jacques Chirac faced a fragmented left but still won narrowly after a shock runoff against Le Pen’s father.
Traders should watch three catalysts: final court rulings on Le Pen’s eligibility, the formal confirmation of centrist candidates like Gabriel Attal, and early regional election results that could reshape party alliances [3][5]. A surprise vacancy in the presidency before April 2027 would trigger an earlier election, altering the timeline and potentially accelerating candidate announcements [4]. Recent polling updates from Ifop and Toluna Harris Interactive, released 9 July, will be critical in assessing whether Le Pen’s lead remains stable or erodes as the campaign intensifies [1].
Methodology
Sports-specific comparison page for Next French Presidential Election. Polymarket's live quote (Polygon order book) plus platform attributes for the three reference venues. Sports markets reward liquidity — Polymarket and Betfair are materially deeper than Kalshi or Manifold.
Resolution & payout
Sports markets typically settle on official final-whistle plus league confirmation. Polymarket uses UMA Optimistic Oracle with a source URL per contract — usually official league data feeds or ESPN/Soccerway. Two-hour dispute window, then smart-contract payout in USDC.
FAQ
- Are prediction markets better than sports betting?
- Prediction markets tend toward tighter odds than bookmakers because they use peer-to-peer exchange rather than bookmaker margin. On major matches, Polymarket quotes typically sit 2-5% closer to the true probability model than bet365 or DraftKings.
- When do sports markets resolve?
- Typically within hours of the official final whistle. Polymarket uses UMA Optimistic Oracle with source URLs pointing at official league data feeds — e.g. the Premier League for EPL markets, UEFA for Champions League, FIFA for World Cup.
- Can I bet on individual matches?
- Yes, Polymarket lists every major Premier League / Champions League / World Cup match as its own market. Liquidity varies — top matches like El Clásico or a semi-final often have six-figure pools, lower-league games closer to three-figure.
- Which sports markets are available?
- Football (soccer) dominates — Champions League, World Cup, Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga — followed by NFL, NBA, tennis Grand Slams, Formula 1, boxing/MMA. Resolution via official league source confirmation.
- How fast do sports winnings settle?
- Once the official league outcome is logged in the UMA Oracle (typically 1-2 hours after the final whistle), Polymarket's smart contract triggers USDC payout. To your wallet within minutes.
Trade Next French Presidential Election on March Madness Predictions
Live order book, 0% fees, USDC settlement in seconds.
Open live market →