Attorney General of Kentucky is suing Polymarket and Kalshi over sports betting claims
TL; DR
- Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman has escalated the state’s battle with prediction market operators.
- The lawsuits target platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, with the allegations focusing on contracts for sports-related events.
- The state claims the products function as unlicensed sports betting and not as regular financial contracts.
- The dispute adds another state-level challenge to a market already wrangling over federal preemption and CFTC oversight.
Kentucky focuses on prediction markets
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman has filed lawsuits against prediction market operators including Kalshi and Polymarket, claiming contracts for sports-related events amount to unlicensed sports betting under state law. The action adds a new state-level front to one of the most important regulatory battles in the prediction market.
The fundamental dispute is simple, but legally messy. Prediction market companies argue that event contracts fall under federal commodity regulation and should not be treated the same as state-licensed sports betting. Kentucky takes the opposite position, saying that the sports products offered to users appear and function like gambling marketplaces, regardless of the label attached to them.
Event contracts or sportsbooks?
The state’s argument focuses on whether users effectively bet on sports results through products presented as prediction contracts. If a platform lets customers buy and sell contracts tied to game results, player results, or tournament events, government regulators may consider that activity to be sports betting, even if the platform considers it a market for information or risk transfer.
That classification is important because state sports betting regimes typically involve licensing requirements, tax obligations, age checks and consumer protection rules. Prediction market operators have relied on federal oversight and the structure of event contracts to argue that a separate state-by-state sports betting model should not apply.
Why Crypto is in the picture
Polymarket’s role makes this a crypto story, but the problem is broader than one blockchain-based location. The broader prediction market sector has grown rapidly because it can provide highly liquid, real-time prices for political, economic, sporting and cultural outcomes. That growth has brought platforms into closer contact with gambling regulators, especially when sports markets dominate volume.
Coinbase’s presence in the broader news surrounding the legal action also underlines how payment rails and platform partnerships could become part of the regulatory landscape. Even companies that don’t offer the prediction contract themselves may face questions if they are seen as helping users finance or access the activity.
A battle that could shape the sector
The cases in Kentucky arrive as the prediction markets are already wrangling over federal preemption, CFTC jurisdiction and the line between financial contracts and gambling products. A state victory would strengthen the case for local regulators to treat contracts for sporting events as betting. A victory for the platform would bolster the industry’s argument that federally regulated event markets should not be bifurcated by state gambling laws.
For crypto and fintech companies, the practical lesson is well known: product design alone rarely solves a regulatory issue. If users perceive a market as a betting market, states may attempt to regulate it as such. That leaves prediction markets with a difficult task: proving that their contracts aren’t just sportsbooks with a different interface.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
