Polymarket 2028 Election Odds: Presidential Market Guide and Current Prices
Track 2028 presidential election odds on Polymarket. Current prices for JD Vance, Gavin Newsom, Marco Rubio, and other candidates. How to trade election prediction markets with over $564M in volume.
The 2028 presidential election is already one of the biggest markets on Polymarket, with over $564 million traded. JD Vance leads the field at about 21% odds, Gavin Newsom sits at 17%, and Marco Rubio holds 10%. Here's how the market breaks down and what traders should know before placing positions.
Trade 2028 Election Markets
Sign Up NowCurrent 2028 Presidential Odds
Polymarket runs several markets covering the 2028 election from different angles. The main ones as of May 2026:
Presidential Election Winner
This is the top-level market where you pick who wins the general election outright. Current prices:
| Candidate | Party | Current Odds | Cost per Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| JD Vance | Republican | ~21% | $0.21 |
| Gavin Newsom | Democrat | ~17% | $0.17 |
| Marco Rubio | Republican | ~10% | $0.10 |
| Other candidates | Various | Varies | Varies |
With more than two years before the election, these prices will move a lot. Early markets tend to be volatile because the candidate field isn't locked in yet.
Which Party Wins?
A simpler binary-style market. Democrats are currently priced at about 61%, Republicans at about 39%. This market strips out the guesswork about individual nominees and lets you trade purely on party direction.
Republican and Democratic Nominee Markets
Separate markets for who each party nominates. On the Republican side, Vance leads at roughly 39%, with Rubio and others trailing. The Democratic side has Newsom as the front-runner. These markets resolve at the party conventions.
Why Election Markets Move Early
Two and a half years before an election might seem early, but there's real information in these prices. Here's what's driving movement right now:
Midterm performance. The 2026 midterm results will reshape the 2028 field. If Democrats sweep the House and Senate (currently priced around 53.5% for a full sweep), it changes the calculus for both parties' primary voters.
Polling data. Vance has posted strong numbers in early Republican primary polls, including 53% at CPAC and 42% in Echelon Insights surveys. Rubio's State Department visibility has lifted his favorability scores. Newsom has been building a national profile since 2024. Each new poll shifts Polymarket prices within hours.
Policy outcomes. Tariff impacts, economic data, and legislative results between now and 2028 will all affect how voters — and traders — evaluate candidates. The current macro environment (elevated inflation, steady job growth) could look very different by late 2027.
How to Trade Election Markets
Buying Individual Candidates
The simplest approach: buy Yes shares on the candidate you think will win. If Vance is priced at $0.21, you're getting roughly 4.8x your money if he wins. The tradeoff is that most candidates at this stage won't end up winning, so most of these positions will expire at zero.
When to buy individuals. Look for moments when the market hasn't caught up to new information. A strong debate performance, a key endorsement, or a surprising poll result can move a candidate's price 3-5 percentage points. If you catch it early, you can buy before the market adjusts.
Trading the Party Market
If you have a view on which party wins but don't want to pick a specific candidate, the party market is cleaner. Democrats at 61% means you pay $0.61 per share and collect $1.00 if any Democrat wins. The implied return is lower (about 64%), but you're not exposed to the risk of picking the wrong person within the party.
Spread Trading Across Nominee and Winner Markets
You can combine positions across markets. For example, if you think Vance wins the Republican nomination but loses the general election, you could buy Yes on Vance in the nominee market and buy Yes on the Democratic party in the general election market. This lets you express a more specific view than either market alone.
Fading Overreactions
Election markets tend to overreact to individual events. A candidate has a bad news cycle and their price drops 3-4 points. If the underlying fundamentals haven't changed, buying the dip can be profitable. This works best with front-runners who have durable support bases.
Key Dates to Watch
These events will create the biggest price movements in 2028 election markets:
| Date | Event | Expected Impact |
|---|---|---|
| November 2026 | Midterm elections | High - reshapes candidate field |
| Early 2027 | Candidate announcements begin | High - new entrants shift odds |
| Late 2027 | Primary debates start | Medium to high |
| Early 2028 | Iowa caucuses / primaries | Very high - actual vote results |
| Summer 2028 | Party conventions | High - nominee markets resolve |
| November 2028 | General election | Final resolution |
Risk Management for Election Markets
Political markets carry risks that differ from sports or crypto markets:
Capital gets locked for a long time. The 2028 presidential winner market won't resolve for over two years. Your money is tied up unless you sell your position early on the order book. Make sure you're comfortable with that time horizon before entering.
Early odds are unreliable. At this stage, roughly 50% of the eventual major candidates probably haven't declared yet. Buying a specific candidate now means accepting the risk that a stronger contender enters the race and tanks your position.
Correlation with other markets. Political outcomes affect economic markets. If you're also trading Fed rate, tariff, or crypto markets on Polymarket, your election positions might be correlated with those bets. Check for overlap before sizing up.
Use limit orders. Election markets can be thin outside of the top 2-3 candidates. Use limit orders to avoid paying wide spreads on less liquid names. For more on order types, see our buying guide.
Getting Started
- Create a Polymarket account — takes about two minutes.
- Deposit funds via card, bank transfer, or crypto.
- Search "2028 election" to see all active markets.
- Start small. A $20-50 position on a candidate or party lets you learn how the market moves without serious risk.
- Watch the midterms. November 2026 results will be the next major catalyst for 2028 election prices.
If you already trade political markets for the 2026 midterms, the 2028 presidential markets use the same mechanics. The main difference is the longer time horizon, which means more uncertainty and wider price ranges. For strategies specific to political trading, see our election betting guide.
Trade 2028 Election Odds Now
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