Polymarket pushes for US regulatory blessing to bring American traders back to its main platform
The prediction market giant is working with the CFTC to lift restrictions that have kept US users off its primary exchange since a 2022 enforcement action.
Polymarket wants back into America. The prediction market platform, which became a cultural phenomenon during the 2024 election cycle, is actively pursuing regulatory approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to reopen its main offshore exchange to US traders.
The move comes after years of regulatory limbo. In 2022, the CFTC slapped Polymarket with a $1.4 million fine and a cease-and-desist order for operating an unregistered derivatives platform, effectively locking American users out of the party.
The regulatory chess game
Polymarket made a significant strategic move in July 2025, acquiring QCEX, a CFTC-licensed derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, for $112 million. That purchase gave Polymarket something money alone can’t usually buy: legitimate regulatory infrastructure.
The acquisition led to the creation of QCX LLC, doing business as Polymarket US. This entity operates as a Designated Contract Market under CFTC regulations.
Polymarket US currently only offers fully collateralized event contracts. No margin, no leverage. Every position has to be backed dollar for dollar.
The company filed with the CFTC on April 28, 2026, seeking approval to let US users trade directly on its primary offshore prediction market exchange. Rather than just operating a compliant but constrained US-only product, Polymarket wants to bring Americans onto the same platform that handles the bulk of its global trading volume.
Regulatory headwinds and tailwinds
A CFTC investigation into Polymarket that followed the 2022 enforcement action was dropped without charges in July 2025. A new CFTC probe launched in June 2026, suggesting the agency isn’t quite ready to look the other way.
Kalshi, a rival prediction market platform, has separately pursued CFTC clearance for margin trading capabilities.
Polymarket has drawn attention for connections to influential political figures, including Donald Trump Jr. In a regulatory environment where political winds can shift agency priorities overnight, those relationships could prove either advantageous or controversial depending on who’s watching.
What this means for the market
The $112 million QCEX acquisition signals that Polymarket is willing to spend serious money on regulatory compliance rather than trying to skirt the rules.
Polymarket operates on the Polygon blockchain, and increased US trading activity would drive more on-chain volume through that ecosystem.
Traders and investors should watch two things closely: the CFTC’s response to Polymarket’s April filing, and the trajectory of the June 2026 investigation. If the investigation wraps up cleanly and the filing gets approved, Polymarket could become the dominant prediction market platform globally with full US access.