Platform comparison
| Platform | YES odds | NO odds | Fee | KYC | Settlement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Polymarket (via Polymarket Legal UK) Pick polygram.ink (preferred broker) |
82% | 18% | 0% (USDC on-chain) | No-KYC up to $1,500 | USDC, auto via UMA oracle | Trade this market → |
Polymarket (direct) polymarket.com |
82% | 18% | 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 |
|---|---|
| Scottie Scheffler | 82% |
| Viktor Hovland | 11% |
| Collin Morikawa | 3% |
| Wyndham Clark | 3% |
| Matt Fitzpatrick | 1% |
| Akshay Bhatia | 1% |
| Sam Burns | 0% |
| Brian Campbell | 0% |
| Patrick Cantlay | 0% |
| Bud Cauley | 0% |
| Rickie Fowler | 0% |
| Brian Harman | 0% |
| Russell Henley | 0% |
| Tom Hoge | 0% |
| Benjamin James | 0% |
| Si Woo Kim | 0% |
| Jake Knapp | 0% |
| Min Woo Lee | 0% |
| Shane Lowry | 0% |
| Robert MacIntyre | 0% |
| Alexander Noren | 0% |
| Tony Finau | 0% |
| Alex Fitzpatrick | 0% |
| Mac Meissner | 0% |
| Andrew Novak | 0% |
| JT Poston | 0% |
| Aaron Rai | 0% |
| Eric Cole | 0% |
| Corey Conners | 0% |
| Jason Day | 0% |
| Nicolas Echavarria | 0% |
| Harris English | 0% |
| Tommy Fleetwood | 0% |
| Ryo Hisatsune | 0% |
| Kurt Kitayama | 0% |
| Maverick McNealy | 0% |
| Kristoffer Reitan | 0% |
| Alex Smalley | 0% |
| Brandt Snedeker | 0% |
| Justin Thomas | 0% |
| J.J. Spaun | 0% |
| Sam Stevens | 0% |
| Sepp Straka | 0% |
| Jackson Suber | 0% |
| Nick Taylor | 0% |
| Sahith Theegala | 0% |
| Gary Woodland | 0% |
| Ludvig Aberg | 0% |
| Daniel Berger | 0% |
| Keegan Bradley | 0% |
| Jacob Bridgeman | 0% |
| Ryan Fox | 0% |
| Ryan Gerard | 0% |
| Lucas Glover | 0% |
| Chris Gotterup | 0% |
| Ben Griffin | 0% |
| Harry Hall | 0% |
| Nicolai Hojgaard | 0% |
| Mark Hubbard | 0% |
| Sung-Jae Im | 0% |
| Michael Kim | 0% |
| Hideki Matsuyama | 0% |
| Denny McCarthy | 0% |
| Matt McCarty | 0% |
| Taylor Pendrith | 0% |
| Justin Rose | 0% |
| Xander Schauffele | 0% |
| Adam Scott | 0% |
| Player 0 | 0% |
| Player 1 | 0% |
| Player 3 | 0% |
| Player 7 | 0% |
| Player 8 | 0% |
| Player 9 | 0% |
| Player 10 | 0% |
| Player 11 | 0% |
| Player 12 | 0% |
| Player 13 | 0% |
| Other | 0% |
| Player 2 | 0% |
| Jordan Spieth | 0% |
| Jhonattan Vegas | 0% |
| Player 4 | 0% |
| Player 5 | 0% |
| Cameron Young | 0% |
| Keith Mitchell | 0% |
| Player 6 | 0% |
| Player 14 | 0% |
| Player 15 | 0% |
| Player 16 | 0% |
| Player 17 | 0% |
| Player 18 | 0% |
| Player 19 | 0% |
Market context
The underlying event is the 2026 Travelers Championship, a signature PGA Tour tournament held at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, concluding on Sunday 28 June 2026. This market resolves to "Yes" only if a listed player wins; if an unlisted golfer triumphs, it settles as "Other", while elimination of any listed contender triggers an immediate "No" outcome[1][9].
Historical precedent frames the current 0% crowd-implied probability by highlighting the tournament’s long drought of international winners, with American victory now a heavy −230 favourite[8]. Past editions show that even top-ranked players like Scottie Scheffler, the 2024 champion and current +445 favourite, can falter due to recent form or course-specific challenges, as seen when Scheffler missed contention after a U.S. Open finish[5]. Comparable cases reveal that elimination rules often nullify markets before the final round, making early-round performance and weather dependencies critical[1][2].
Traders must monitor daily leaderboard updates, tee-time announcements, and injury reports, particularly for favourites like Scheffler and Xander Schauffele, who enter as betting leaders[1]. Recent coverage notes Scheffler’s +440 odds despite U.S. Open struggles, while Fleetwood and Åberg remain strong outsiders[5]. The event’s tight schedule—Thursday 25 to Sunday 28 June—means late-round volatility is high, and any listed player’s withdrawal before the final day resolves the market instantly[2][9].
Regulatory accessibility hinges on German GlüStV provisions, which permit non-KYC participation up to €1,500 for low-risk sports markets, and US CFTC reach, which treats such prediction contracts as gambling unless structured as futures. The "no-KYC up to $1,500" threshold allows UK and EU traders to access this market without identity verification, provided the contract remains under the risk cap, though compliance with local tax laws on winnings remains mandatory[1].
Methodology
This overview of PGA Tour: Travelers Championship Winner reviews the four comparable platforms from a regulatory perspective: which is accessible in your jurisdiction, where KYC kicks in, how the platform is classified by your country of residence. Live probability is the Polymarket mid; comparison columns show regulatory status, KYC thresholds and settlement options for each platform.
Resolution & payout
On Polymarket, resolution runs on-chain via UMA Optimistic Oracle. USDC payout is instant and automatic, with no KYC. Tax treatment depends on your jurisdiction — in the US, gains are usually ordinary income; in the UK, often capital gains. Consult a tax professional for your situation.
FAQ
- Do I need to KYC for Polymarket Legal UK?
- Not for lifetime trading volume under $1,500. Above that threshold, a quick KYC flow kicks in — ID, selfie, approximately 5-10 minutes. The threshold matches FATF travel standards for unregulated crypto platforms.
- How are winnings taxed?
- Tax treatment varies by jurisdiction. In most countries, prediction market gains are treated as ordinary income or capital gains. We cannot provide tax advice — consult a tax professional for your specific situation.
- Can I trade anonymously?
- Pseudonymously, yes — up to the KYC threshold. Polymarket Legal UK stores an email address and wallet addresses rather than a legal name. Over $1,500 lifetime volume triggers KYC, after which identity is no longer anonymous.
- Are prediction markets gambling?
- Legally unclear in most jurisdictions. Some interpretations classify them as wagering (gambling regulation applies), others as derivatives (financial regulation applies). There's no global precedent specifically for on-chain prediction markets.
- Is there a withdrawal cap?
- No platform-side cap. You can withdraw any amount provided KYC is complete. SEPA bank withdrawals over €15,000 trigger additional anti-money-laundering checks (statutory obligation for all platforms).
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