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Prediction Markets in the UK: Legal Status, Platforms, What’s Next

Can you use prediction markets in the UK? The FCA and UKGC create a dual regulatory framework. See which platforms are available, what’s blocked and coming.

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Prediction markets in the UK exist at the intersection of two regulatory regimes that are often conflated. The Financial Conduct Authority bans binary options for retail consumers, which catches Kalshi-style event contracts.1FCA, “FCA confirms permanent ban on the sale of binary options to retail consumers,” fca.org.uk, April 2019 The UK Gambling Commission, separately, classifies prediction markets as gambling products requiring a betting intermediary license.2UK Gambling Commission, “Prediction markets – here’s what you need to know,” gamblingcommission.gov.uk, February 2026

The result is a system where you can bet on the next Prime Minister through Betfair but cannot buy a YES contract on US inflation data through Kalshi.

That does not mean UK residents are shut out. Betfair Exchange, Smarkets, and Matchbook Predictions (launched January 2026) all offer prediction-style markets under UKGC licenses. The UKGC formalized its regulatory position in February 2026, Matchbook launched the UK’s first dedicated prediction market product in January, and Betfair is trialing a prediction-markets interface on its exchange.

This guide maps the full UK prediction market picture: the three regulatory layers that shape access, which platforms you can use today, and what developments are worth watching. Regulatory positions discussed here reflect UK law as of April 2026.

Why UK Prediction Markets Are Different from the US

The core difference is regulatory classification. In the US, prediction market contracts are regulated as futures by the CFTC, which treats them as financial instruments. Kalshi operates as a Designated Contract Market, the same regulatory category as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.3CFTC, “Order of Designation: KalshiEX LLC,” cftc.gov, November 2020 That classification gives event contracts a clear legal home within the existing financial system. This dual classification, which varies by country, is central to the broader question of prediction market legality across jurisdictions.

The UK has no equivalent framework. Two separate regulators split jurisdiction. The FCA oversees financial products and banned binary options for retail consumers in 2019, a ban that catches prediction market contracts because they share the same structure: a fixed payout tied to a binary outcome within a specified timeframe. The UKGC, meanwhile, classifies prediction markets as gambling. If you are offering contracts on event outcomes to British consumers, you need a betting intermediary license, the same type of license Betfair and Smarkets already hold.

This dual classification creates a practical gap that surprises many traders. You can bet on the next general election through Betfair, where political betting has been legal for decades under a UKGC license. But you cannot buy a YES contract on whether UK CPI exceeds 3% through Kalshi, because that contract triggers the FCA’s binary options prohibition.

The same user, trading the same type of outcome, faces different rules depending on which regulator’s jurisdiction the product falls under. Sports bettors accustomed to thinking in fractional odds can verify how prediction market contract prices translate with the odds converter, but the regulatory gap is harder to bridge.

The Three Layers of UK Prediction Market Regulation

UK prediction market regulation is not a single rule. It is three overlapping layers, each controlled by a different authority with a different rationale. Understanding which layer applies to a given product determines whether you can trade it legally from the UK.

The FCA Binary Options Ban

The Financial Conduct Authority’s permanent ban on binary options for retail consumers took effect on April 2, 2019.4FCA, “FCA confirms permanent ban on the sale of binary options to retail consumers,” fca.org.uk, April 2019 The rule itself is straightforward: firms acting in or from the UK cannot sell, market, or distribute binary options to retail clients.

Why Prediction Contracts Trigger the Ban

Prediction market contracts share the defining characteristics of binary options. Both offer a fixed payout contingent on a binary outcome (yes or no, above or below) within a specified timeframe. A Kalshi contract on whether unemployment exceeds 4.5% by December is structurally identical to a binary option on the same underlying: you pay a fixed price, the contract resolves to $1 or $0, and your profit or loss is the difference.

The FCA does not distinguish between “event contract” and “binary option” based on branding. It looks at the product mechanics, and prediction market contracts match the prohibited structure. This is why Kalshi excluded the UK from its 140-country international expansion in October 2025,5Oddspedia, “Where Is Kalshi Legal? Countries, States, Regulation Explained,” oddspedia.com, 2026 and why Polymarket geo-blocks UK IP addresses entirely, a restriction rooted in the platform’s lack of a UKGC license and the broader UK legality questions surrounding unregulated prediction markets.6Polymarket, “Geographic Restrictions,” docs.polymarket.com, 2026

The UKGC Gambling Classification

Separate from the FCA, the UK Gambling Commission regulates gambling products. The UKGC’s position on prediction markets crystallized in a February 4, 2026 blog post by Brad Enright, the Commission’s Director of Strategy.7UK Gambling Commission (Brad Enright), “Prediction markets – here’s what you need to know,” gamblingcommission.gov.uk, February 2026

What the February 2026 Position Means

Enright’s post stated that prediction market operators in Great Britain would “likely need to qualify as betting intermediaries” because “their core aspects are akin to what in the UK would be described as a ‘Betting Exchange.’” This is significant for three reasons. First, it confirms that the UKGC will not allow prediction market platforms to classify themselves as non-gambling products, closing a potential regulatory loophole. Second, it anchors prediction markets within an existing licensing framework (betting intermediary) rather than creating a new one. Third, it makes clear that operating without a UKGC license carries criminal liability.

The practical consequence is that any platform wanting to offer prediction markets to UK consumers needs a betting intermediary license from the UKGC, regardless of how the platform describes itself. This is the path Matchbook Predictions followed when it launched in January 2026 under its existing exchange license, and the framework Betfair would use if it rolls out Betfair Predicts more broadly.

Political Betting: The Exception That Proves the Rule

Political betting has been legal in the UK through licensed bookmakers for decades. Betfair Exchange has offered political markets since its founding in 2000, and Smarkets built a strong reputation specifically for political event markets.8Betfair, “Regulatory Information,” support.betfair.com, 2026 This is not a loophole or grey area. Licensed bookmakers and exchanges can legally offer odds on elections, leadership contests, and policy outcomes because these products are offered under UKGC gambling licenses, not as financial instruments subject to FCA oversight.

The distinction matters because it explains why UK prediction market access feels contradictory. A UK trader can back “Labour to win most seats” at 13/8 on Betfair but cannot buy a YES contract on the same outcome through Kalshi at 62 cents. The bet is functionally similar, but the regulatory classification is different. Betfair’s product is a licensed gambling product supervised by the UKGC. Kalshi’s product is a regulated event contract supervised by the CFTC, with no UK equivalent, and it triggers the FCA’s binary options ban if offered to UK retail consumers.

The UK situation is genuinely complex, not just “prediction markets are banned.” The FCA prohibits binary options for retail clients, and most PM contracts technically qualify. Separately, the UKGC considers PMs as gambling requiring a betting intermediary license. But the UK has allowed licensed political betting for decades and Betfair’s exchange model has operated since 2000. The result is a system where you can bet on the next Prime Minister through Betfair but can’t buy a YES contract on CPI through Kalshi. Whether that distinction makes long-term policy sense is debatable, but it’s the law today.

Robert C.

Which Platforms Can UK Residents Actually Use?

The regulatory framework narrows the field considerably, but UK residents still have viable options for trading on event outcomes. The available platforms fall into two categories: UKGC-licensed exchanges that have operated for years and a new entrant designed specifically as a prediction market. For a ranked comparison, the best UK prediction market platforms guide evaluates each option against different trading priorities.

Platforms Available to UK Users

Betfair Exchange is the largest and most liquid option. Owned by Flutter Entertainment, Betfair has held UKGC licenses since 2000 and offers political markets, sports markets, and current affairs markets in an exchange format where users set their own odds.9Betfair, “Betfair Charges,” betfair.com/aboutUs/Betfair.Charges/, 2026 The default commission is 5% on net winnings per market, with a 2% tier available through the Basic rewards package. Betfair’s political markets regularly carry deep liquidity, particularly around general elections and leadership contests, making it the highest-volume UK exchange for political trading.

Smarkets is the lower-cost alternative. The London-based exchange charges a flat 2% commission on net market winnings. Pro Tier users (mandatory for those placing 1,500 or more bets per month) pay 1%, though Pro Tier commission applies per settled bet rather than per market.10Smarkets, “Commission FAQ,” help.smarkets.com, 2026 Smarkets has built a particularly strong reputation for UK political markets and offers UKGC customer fund protection rated “high” by the regulator. The exchange covers politics, sports, and entertainment markets, and has positioned itself as the lower-cost exchange alternative to Betfair for UK bettors.

Matchbook Predictions is the newest entrant, launching in January 2026 as the first UK platform to offer a dedicated prediction market product.11SBC News, “Matchbook targets first predictions market launch in UK,” sbcnews.co.uk, December 2025 Operating under Matchbook’s existing UKGC exchange license, it presents contracts in the US-style Yes/No format with percentage-based pricing rather than traditional fractional odds. The initial focus is sports, with politics and entertainment categories expanding.

For UK users familiar with Betfair or Smarkets, the key difference is the contract format: instead of backing or laying at exchange odds, you buy YES or NO positions priced between 1 and 99 pence.

Licensed bookmakers also offer political betting on major events (elections, leadership contests, referendums) through traditional fixed-odds markets. These lack the exchange dynamics and position-trading flexibility of the platforms above but provide straightforward access to political outcome markets.

Platforms Blocked in the UK

The major US prediction market platforms are not accessible to UK users.

PlatformUK StatusWhy
KalshiBlockedFCA binary options ban; UK excluded from international launch
PolymarketGeo-blockedNo UKGC license; active geo-restriction of UK IP addresses
Robinhood EventsNot availableUS-only product; in FCA discussions but no UK timeline
FanDuel PredictsNot availableUS-only (CFTC-regulated, no UK equivalent)
DraftKings PredictionsNot availableUS-only (CFTC-regulated, no UK equivalent)
PredictItNot availableUS-only (CFTC no-action letter)

Polymarket explicitly prohibits VPN use to bypass geographic restrictions under Section 2.1.4 of its Terms of Service, and users who circumvent geo-blocks risk account bans and frozen funds.12Polymarket, “Terms of Service,” polymarket.com, 2026 This article does not recommend VPN circumvention of platform restrictions.

The fee gap between available UK platforms is worth modeling for anyone choosing between them, and the fee calculator lets you compare the all-in cost of a specific trade across multiple platforms side by side.

How Matchbook Predictions Changes the UK Landscape

Matchbook’s January 2026 launch matters because it proves the UKGC licensing pathway works for prediction market products. Rather than waiting for the FCA to create a new regulatory category or applying for a novel license, Matchbook built its prediction market on top of its existing betting exchange infrastructure and UKGC exchange license.13Good Money Guide, “Prediction Markets potential in the UK: Matchbook expands to event contracts,” goodmoneyguide.com, 2026 The regulatory question that had been theoretical (“could a PM product operate under a betting intermediary license?”) now has a working answer.

The product itself mirrors US-style prediction markets more closely than anything previously available to UK users. Contracts are priced as Yes/No positions between 1 and 99 pence, driven by supply and demand rather than bookmaker-set odds. If you believe an outcome is more likely than the current price suggests, you buy YES. If less likely, you buy NO. For anyone who has followed Kalshi or Polymarket from the UK without being able to trade, Matchbook Predictions is the closest accessible equivalent.

The initial market offering focuses on sports, reflecting Matchbook’s core exchange expertise, with politics and entertainment categories in development. Matchbook is also deploying the technology as a white-label product for easyBet, a gambling brand within the business group founded by easyJet creator Stelios Haji-Ioannou, which signals confidence that the model is scalable within the UKGC framework.14Yogonet, “Matchbook to launch UK prediction markets in January as it eyes U.S. expansion,” yogonet.com, December 2025

Betfair appears to be watching closely. The company is trialing “Betfair Predicts,” a prediction-markets interface layered on its existing exchange, available to a small group of invite-only account holders as of April 2026.15Casino.org, “Betfair Eyes Prediction Market Growth with ‘Betfair Predicts’,” casino.org, 2026 If Flutter Entertainment (Betfair’s parent) moves Betfair Predicts to full launch, UK users would have the world’s most liquid betting exchange offering prediction market-style contracts alongside its traditional exchange product.

The UKGC’s Feb 2026 statement wasn’t surprising to anyone in the industry. Their position is consistent: if money changes hands on event outcomes, it’s gambling, and you need a license. Matchbook’s approach, launching PMs under their existing exchange license, is exactly the path I’d expect. The question is whether the FCA will eventually create a separate category for event contracts, the way the CFTC has in the US. Right now, I wouldn’t hold my breath.

Ben L.

What’s Coming Next for UK Prediction Markets

The UK prediction market landscape is moving on multiple fronts, and several developments are worth tracking.

Robinhood has confirmed it is in conversations with the FCA about launching prediction market products in the UK.16Financial Magnates, “Robinhood in Talks With UK and EU Regulators on Prediction Markets Expansion,” financemagnates.com, 2026 The company identified the UK and Europe as its highest-demand regions outside the US, but no timeline or product structure has been disclosed. The core challenge remains classification: Robinhood’s US event contracts are regulated as futures by the CFTC, but offering similar products in the UK would either require FCA authorization (untested for event contracts) or a UKGC gambling license (which would fundamentally change the product’s regulatory identity).

Smarkets, the London-based exchange already serving UK political bettors, filed a DCM application with the CFTC on March 4, 2026, seeking to operate a regulated prediction market exchange in the United States.17DeFi Rate, “Smarkets seeks CFTC approval for prediction markets,” defirate.com, March 2026 If approved, Smarkets would become one of the few platforms holding both a UKGC license and CFTC DCM designation, positioning it to offer prediction market products across both regulatory regimes. The application is pending, with CFTC decisions typically taking up to six months.

The larger question is whether UK regulators will maintain the current dual-track approach (FCA ban on financial-style contracts, UKGC licensing for gambling-classified products) or eventually create a dedicated framework for event contracts. The UKGC’s February 2026 position suggests the Commission is content to regulate prediction markets within the existing betting intermediary structure for now. Whether the FCA considers carving out event contracts from the binary options ban, as some industry voices have urged, remains an open question with no public indication of movement.

Last Verified: April 2026. The UK prediction market regulatory landscape is evolving rapidly. This article is reviewed quarterly and updated when material changes occur.

Start With What the UK Offers Today

UK prediction market access is constrained by regulation but far from nonexistent. The FCA’s binary options ban blocks Kalshi and Polymarket, and the UKGC requires a gambling license for anyone offering event contracts to British consumers. Within those boundaries, Betfair Exchange, Smarkets, and Matchbook Predictions all provide legitimate, regulated paths to trading on event outcomes.

If you are primarily interested in political markets, Betfair offers the deepest liquidity and longest track record. If lower commission matters more, Smarkets at 2% undercuts Betfair’s default 5%. If you want the closest experience to US-style prediction markets, Matchbook Predictions’ Yes/No contract format is the first UK product built specifically for that purpose.

Matchbook proved the UKGC licensing pathway works, Betfair is testing a prediction-markets interface, and Robinhood is exploring UK entry with the FCA. The platforms available today are where to start.

Sources & References

  • 1
    FCA, “FCA confirms permanent ban on the sale of binary options to retail consumers,” fca.org.uk, April 2019
  • 2
    UK Gambling Commission, “Prediction markets – here’s what you need to know,” gamblingcommission.gov.uk, February 2026
  • 3
    CFTC, “Order of Designation: KalshiEX LLC,” cftc.gov, November 2020
  • 4
    FCA, “FCA confirms permanent ban on the sale of binary options to retail consumers,” fca.org.uk, April 2019
  • 5
    Oddspedia, “Where Is Kalshi Legal? Countries, States, Regulation Explained,” oddspedia.com, 2026
  • 6
    Polymarket, “Geographic Restrictions,” docs.polymarket.com, 2026
  • 7
    UK Gambling Commission (Brad Enright), “Prediction markets – here’s what you need to know,” gamblingcommission.gov.uk, February 2026
  • 8
    Betfair, “Regulatory Information,” support.betfair.com, 2026
  • 9
    Betfair, “Betfair Charges,” betfair.com/aboutUs/Betfair.Charges/, 2026
  • 10
    Smarkets, “Commission FAQ,” help.smarkets.com, 2026
  • 11
    SBC News, “Matchbook targets first predictions market launch in UK,” sbcnews.co.uk, December 2025
  • 12
    Polymarket, “Terms of Service,” polymarket.com, 2026
  • 13
    Good Money Guide, “Prediction Markets potential in the UK: Matchbook expands to event contracts,” goodmoneyguide.com, 2026
  • 14
    Yogonet, “Matchbook to launch UK prediction markets in January as it eyes U.S. expansion,” yogonet.com, December 2025
  • 15
    Casino.org, “Betfair Eyes Prediction Market Growth with ‘Betfair Predicts’,” casino.org, 2026
  • 16
    Financial Magnates, “Robinhood in Talks With UK and EU Regulators on Prediction Markets Expansion,” financemagnates.com, 2026
  • 17
    DeFi Rate, “Smarkets seeks CFTC approval for prediction markets,” defirate.com, March 2026