Key Takeaways
- Polymarket’s $4.28B World Cup market and Kalshi’s $1.29B market both favor Spain at 59%.
- Messi leads Golden Boot odds at 57% on Polymarket and 56% on Kalshi ahead of Sunday’s final.
- Spain and Argentina meet Sunday, July 19, at Metlife Stadium, with FIFA’s result settling both markets.
Kickoff is set for 3 p.m. EDT. On Polymarket, the World Cup winner contract has drawn $4.28 billion in total volume, with Spain priced at 59 cents per share and Argentina at 40 cents. On Kalshi, a separate Spain versus Argentina market has pulled in $1.29 billion, pricing Spain at 59% and Argentina at 41.6%.
Polymarket Bettors Favor Spain by Wide Margin
Traders on Polymarket have committed $123.5 million specifically to Spain’s outcome and $158 million to Argentina’s, meaning more dollars are flowing toward the underdog even though its win probability trails Spain’s.

The World Cup winner market originally listed more than 50 possible teams before narrowing to the two finalists. Moreover, a great deal of prediction market and sportsbook bettors placed a lot of money on France winning, but that turned out to be a giant upset.
Polymarket’s Golden Boot market, covering the tournament’s top scorer, has Lionel Messi at 57 cents against Kylian Mbappe at 42 cents, on $66 million in volume. A separate Golden Ball contract for best overall player has Messi far ahead at 91 cents, backed by $11 million in trades. A contract asking whether Spain finishes as an unbeaten champion sits at 100 cents on Polymarket.
Kalshi Shows the Same Lean, Different Numbers
Kalshi’s version of the Spain versus Argentina final carries $1.25 billion in volume on its own, separate from the platform’s broader $1.29 billion market total.

Spain pays out at 1.65x on a win, implying 59%. Argentina pays 2.34x, implying 41%. Kalshi’s Golden Boot market has Messi at 56% and Mbappe at 44%, on $21.67 million in volume, a narrower gap than Polymarket shows. Kalshi’s Golden Ball contract favors Messi at 90% over Rodri at 6%, backed by $5.73 million in trades.
Kalshi also breaks down the final by regulation time only, separate from extra time and penalties. Spain wins outright at 43%, a draw comes in at 32%, and Argentina wins at 28%. Kalshi traders betting on total goals have the over on 2.5 goals priced at 43%, while Argentina to score at least one goal sits at 66%.
Trump Attendance Priced on Both Platforms
Both platforms carry contracts on whether U.S. President Trump attends the final. Polymarket prices that outcome at nearly 97 cents on around $855,000 in volume.

Kalshi prices the same bet at 96%, backed by $6.14 million, a far larger share of that platform’s trading than the equivalent Polymarket contract draws.
Prop Markets Diverge on Entertainment and Attendance
The two platforms disagree sharply on who performs at halftime. Kalshi has Sabrina Carpenter favored at 23% and Swae Lee at 18%, on $3.59 million in volume. Polymarket instead prices Shakira’s “Dai Dai” at 73 cents to open the show, well ahead of Madonna’s “Like a Prayer” at 34 cents and BTS’s “Dynamite” at 45 cents.
Ticket price expectations also differ. Polymarket splits the get-in price into three bands, with $7,500 to $8,000 and above $9,000 both priced at 45 cents. Kalshi’s ticket contract asks a single question, pricing a get-in cost above $9,500 at 52%.
U.S. viewership contracts show a similar split. Kalshi prices viewership above 42 million at 66% on $87,950 in volume. Polymarket’s version of the market has the over on 58 million viewers priced at 28 cents.
Golden Glove and Fair Play Contracts Also Split
Polymarket’s Golden Glove market favors Spain’s Unai Simon at 85 cents over Argentina’s Emiliano Martinez at 15 cents, on $263,000 in volume. Kalshi prices the same matchup slightly closer, with Simon at 83% and Martinez at 15%, on $849,595 traded, more than triple Polymarket’s volume in that category.
Norway leads the Fair Play Award market on both platforms. Polymarket has Norway at 79 cents against Spain at 16 cents. Kalshi prices Norway at 80% and Spain at 13%, with $236,120 in volume, tracking closely with Polymarket’s $245,000 figure in the same category.
Resolution Rules Traders Should Know
Both platforms resolve their World Cup winner contracts based on the official result published by FIFA. Any team mathematically eliminated in the knockout rounds sees its market resolve to No immediately on Polymarket. If the tournament is canceled or fails to conclude by October 13, 2026, that market resolves to Other.
The final kicks off Sunday, and prediction market traders holding positions on either platform will find out within hours whether Spain, Argentina, Messi, or the celebrities booked for the halftime show deliver the outcomes priced into the odds.







