Prediction market platform Polymarket announced on March 24, 2026, that it will expand trading fees to nearly all market categories on March 30, with crypto markets facing the highest peak rate of 1.8% while sports markets remain the cheapest at 0.75%.
The platform’s dynamic fee model, which scales based on market probability, will now apply to politics, finance, economics, culture, weather, and technology categories for the first time. Alongside the fee expansion, Polymarket launched a referral program and updated its market integrity rules, signaling a shift toward a more structured exchange model as prediction markets draw growing regulatory attention.
Polymarket utilizes a probability-based fee model rather than a flat commission. Fees peak when an event has a probability near 50%—the point of maximum uncertainty and trading volume—and approach zero as outcomes become more certain. All fees are taker-only and denominated in USDC, with deposit and withdrawal transactions remaining fee-free.
Under the new structure, peak fee rates vary by market category:
Crypto markets: 1.8% (up from 1.56%)
Politics, finance, economics, culture, weather, technology: 1% to 1.56%
Sports markets: 0.75% (up from 0.44%)
Geopolitical and global event markets: Continue to trade without fees, per platform documentation
For context, a $50 sports trade at 50% probability will now incur approximately $0.38 in fees, up from $0.22 under the previous structure.
The fees are not retained as protocol profit but are designed to fund the platform’s Maker Rebates Program, redistributing capital to liquidity providers to ensure tighter spreads and deeper order books. The phased rollout began in January 2026 with fees on high-velocity 15-minute cryptocurrency markets, implemented as a defense against latency arbitrage where automated bots exploited millisecond pricing lags.
Polymarket launched a referral program open to users who have traded at least $10,000 in volume. Under the program:
Direct referrals: Referrers earn 30% of fees generated for the first 180 days
Indirect referrals: Referrers earn 10% of fees generated
Rewards: Unlimited and paid daily at midnight UTC
Polymarket updated its market integrity rules across both its international platform and CFTC-regulated U.S. exchange. The new rules prohibit:
Trading on stolen confidential information
Trading on illegal tips
Trading by individuals who can influence event outcomes
Users can report suspicious activity through new Market Integrity pages. The updates coincide with increased regulatory scrutiny, including the recent bipartisan introduction of the Prediction Markets Are Gambling Act, which would ban sports event contracts.
The fee expansion marks a structural shift for Polymarket, which historically built its user base on a predominantly zero-fee trading model. The inclusion of politics—a category that gained prominence during the 2024 U.S. election cycle—represents a significant transition for core operations. Market makers in political categories will receive a 25% rebate from collected fees, distributed daily in USDC.
The combined changes position Polymarket closer to a regulated exchange model as prediction markets draw growing attention from both traders and regulators. The platform’s CFTC-regulated U.S. exchange operates under separate rules, with the updated integrity rules applying across both platforms.
Polymarket is expanding trading fees to nearly all market categories on March 30, using a dynamic model where fees peak near 50% probability and approach zero as outcomes become certain. Crypto markets face the highest peak rate at 1.8%, while sports markets remain the lowest at 0.75%. Geopolitical markets continue to trade without fees.
Users who have traded at least $10,000 in volume can earn 30% of fees from direct referrals and 10% from indirect referrals for 180 days after a referred user signs up. Rewards are unlimited and paid daily at midnight UTC.
The fee expansion follows a phased rollout that began in January 2026, initially applied to crypto markets to deter latency arbitrage bots. The move aligns Polymarket more closely with traditional exchange models, shifting from subsidized growth to sustainable fee-based microstructure while redistributing fees to liquidity providers through the Maker Rebates Program.