Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Polymarket (via Kalshi Alternative UK) Pick polygram.ink (preferred broker) |
60% | 40% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | Trade this market → |
Polymarket (direct) polymarket.com |
60% | 40% | 0% | Geo-blocked in US/UK/EU | USDC, on-chain | Trade this market → |
Kalshi kalshi.com |
— | — | Up to 7% per trade | US-only, KYC required | USD | Trade this market → |
Betfair Exchange betfair.com |
— | — | 2-5% commission | Full KYC from first trade | GBP / EUR | Trade this market → |
Manifold Markets manifold.markets |
— | — | Play-money (mana) | None — play-money | Mana (no cash-out) | Trade this market → |
Outcome probabilities
Current market-implied probability for each outcome, from the live order book.
| Outcome | Probability |
|---|---|
| Jannik Sinner | 60% |
| Novak Djokovic | 14% |
| Alexander Zverev | 9% |
| Taylor Fritz | 6% |
| Grigor Dimitrov | 4% |
| Félix Auger-Aliassime | 3% |
| Alex de Minaur | 2% |
| Alexander Bublik | 2% |
| Hubert Hurkacz | 1% |
| Jiří Lehečka | 1% |
| Flavio Cobolli | 1% |
| Carlos Alcaraz | 0% |
| Jack Draper | 0% |
| Ben Shelton | 0% |
| João Fonseca | 0% |
| Jakub Menšík | 0% |
| Daniil Medvedev | 0% |
| Arthur Fils | 0% |
| Tommy Paul | 0% |
| Lorenzo Musetti | 0% |
| Matteo Berrettini | 0% |
| Stefanos Tsitsipas | 0% |
| Sebastian Korda | 0% |
| Gabriel Diallo | 0% |
| Andrey Rublev | 0% |
| Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard | 0% |
| Lorenzo Sonego | 0% |
| Alex Michelsen | 0% |
| Frances Tiafoe | 0% |
| Cameron Norrie | 0% |
| Alexei Popyrin | 0% |
| Tallon Griekspoor | 0% |
| Francisco Cerúndolo | 0% |
| Ugo Humbert | 0% |
| Alejandro Davidovich Fokina | 0% |
| Casper Ruud | 0% |
| Karen Khachanov | 0% |
| Tomáš Macháč | 0% |
| Nicolás Jarry | 0% |
| Marin Čilić | 0% |
| Other | 0% |
| Player A | 0% |
| Player B | 0% |
| Player C | 0% |
| Player D | 0% |
| Player E | 0% |
| Player F | 0% |
| Player G | 0% |
| Player H | 0% |
| Player I | 0% |
| Player J | 0% |
| Player K | 0% |
| Player L | 0% |
| Player M | 0% |
| Player N | 0% |
| Player O | 0% |
| Player P | 0% |
| Player Q | 0% |
| Player R | 0% |
| Player S | 0% |
| Player T | 0% |
| Player U | 0% |
| Player V | 0% |
| Player W | 0% |
| Player X | 0% |
| Player Y | 0% |
| Player Z | 0% |
Market context
The 2026 Wimbledon Men’s Singles Tournament, running from 29 June to 12 July, will crown the player who wins the final on 12 July. World No. 1 Jannik Sinner is the defending champion and the clear favourite across major books, with odds implying a 61% chance of victory[1][2]. This market’s current 60% YES probability aligns tightly with those live odds, suggesting the crowd is pricing Sinner’s dominance consistently with traditional sportsbooks.
Historically, Sinner’s 2025 Wimbledon win and his status as the top-ranked player since the tournament’s odds opened reinforce his credibility as the likely winner[1][5]. Comparable cases, such as Djokovic’s 2022 title after a long injury gap, show that even legendary players face steep odds when not at peak form—Djokovic now sits at +650, far behind Sinner[2]. The divergence between decimal odds (e.g. FanDuel’s -150) and implied probability (60%) highlights how platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi frame risk differently, while fee structures and KYC requirements further separate them from Betfair or Smarkets.
Traders should monitor Sinner’s pre-tournament fitness announcements and any schedule changes in the weeks leading to 29 June. Recent reports confirm he remains the -195 favourite with no injury concerns, but a sudden withdrawal would shift the market to “No”[2]. Watch for updates from the ATP on his Queen’s Club participation, a key warm-up event, as any absence could signal underlying issues before Wimbledon begins.
Methodology
We read 2026 Men’s Wimbledon Winner from four platform perspectives: Polymarket (on-chain CLOB), Kalshi (CFTC-regulated exchange), Betfair Exchange (sports book exchange), Smarkets (peer-to-peer betting exchange). Polymarket's live mid is the canonical probability; the side-by-side columns benchmark fees, KYC, settlement currency and deposit rails so you can choose the venue that fits your jurisdiction and trade size.
Resolution & payout
Polymarket settles via UMA Optimistic Oracle on Polygon. A proposer posts the outcome with a bond, the two-hour window runs, then the smart contract pays USDC.
Kalshi settles USD through the CFTC-regulated clearinghouse — the cleanest variant, with heavier KYC. Betfair Exchange settles in account currency (GBP/EUR), net of 2-5% commission. Smarkets follows the same model as Betfair with a lower default 2% commission.
FAQ
- Polymarket vs Kalshi — which is better?
- Depends on your location. Kalshi is CFTC-regulated, US-only with full KYC. Polymarket is global, on-chain, no KYC up to $1,500. Polymarket has ~10x higher liquidity but higher regulatory risk.
- What does Polymarket cost vs Kalshi?
- Polymarket: 0% fees, only Polygon network costs (~$0.01/trade). Kalshi: up to 7% per trade plus spread. For high-frequency traders, Polymarket is dramatically cheaper.
- Which platform has the deepest liquidity?
- Polymarket — by a wide margin. Top markets reach $50-500M volume, Kalshi ~$200M cumulative, Betfair similar. Deeper liquidity means your trade moves the quote less.
- Are all these platforms regulated?
- No. Kalshi is CFTC-regulated (US). Betfair and Smarkets are UK Gambling Commission licensed. Polymarket operates without explicit regulation — a different risk profile than a regulated sportsbook.
- Which platform supports Klarna/SOFORT?
- Directly: none. Polymarket accepts only USDC on Polygon. Kalshi Alternative UK offers a fiat on-ramp via Klarna or SOFORT (DE/AT/CH) and converts internally to USDC for the Polymarket order book. T+1 processing.
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