prediction markets

Prediction Markets vs Polls: Why Markets Predict Better

Polls ask opinions; prediction markets price them with money. Here's why markets often forecast elections and events more accurately than polling.

POTS Team ·
  • #prediction-markets
  • #polls
  • #forecasting
  • #elections

Every election cycle, polls and prediction markets disagree — and surprisingly often, the market is closer. Why does a crowd of traders out-forecast a scientifically sampled poll? The difference comes down to incentives.

Two ways to measure belief

A poll samples a population and asks what they think. A prediction market lets anyone buy a “Yes” or “No” token on an outcome; the price settles where buyers and sellers agree, and it reads directly as a probability. One collects opinions. The other collects bets.

Why markets pull ahead

1. Skin in the game

A poll respondent pays nothing for being wrong. A trader does. That single fact filters out wishful thinking, trolling, and low-confidence noise — the people moving the price are the ones willing to risk money on being right.

2. Continuous, not a snapshot

A poll is a photograph taken over several days, then published — often stale by the time you read it. A market reprices the moment news breaks. When accuracy sharpens hour by hour toward resolution, it’s because the price never stops updating.

3. It aggregates private information

No single trader knows everything. But each brings a fragment — local knowledge, a model, a hunch — and the price absorbs all of it into one number. A poll can’t capture what respondents don’t volunteer.

4. It weights by conviction

One poll respondent equals one vote. In a market, a trader who’s more confident can take a larger position, so the price reflects not just what people believe but how strongly.

Where polls still have an edge

Polls aren’t obsolete:

  • Demographic detail — polls tell you who believes what; a market only gives one aggregate number.
  • No-liquidity questions — for niche or local races with no traders, a poll is the only signal.
  • Causal insight — polls can probe why opinions shift; a price can’t.

The honest framing isn’t “markets replace polls.” It’s that markets turn many polls, models, and private signals into a single, live, money-weighted probability.

The catch

A market is only as good as its liquidity. Thin markets reflect a few opinions, not a crowd — which is why depth matters and why apps that share a single deep order book produce sharper prices than isolated ones.

Curious how a crowd of traders becomes a probability signal? Read our explainer on how prediction markets work.

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