27 more outcomes Listed by current odds
- ↓ 50,000 50% $0.5
- ↑ 85,000 37.5% $0.375
- ↓ 45,000 37% $0.37
- ↑ 90,000 31.5% $0.315
- ↑ 95,000 28% $0.28
- ↓ 40,000 27.5% $0.275
- ↑ 100,000 18% $0.18
- ↓ 35,000 17.5% $0.175
- ↑ 110,000 12.5% $0.125
- ↓ 30,000 12% $0.12
- ↑ 120,000 9.5% $0.095
- ↓ 25,000 8.5% $0.085
- ↓ 20,000 6.5% $0.065
- ↑ 140,000 5.5% $0.055
- ↑ 130,000 4.5% $0.045
- ↑ 150,000 4.3% $0.043
- ↓ 15,000 4.1% $0.041
- ↓ 10,000 3.6% $0.036
- ↑ 160,000 3.5% $0.035
- ↓ 5,000 2.7% $0.027
- ↑ 180,000 2.6% $0.026
- ↑ 170,000 2.6% $0.026
- ↑ 190,000 2.1% $0.021
- ↑ 250,000 2.1% $0.021
- ↑ 200,000 2.1% $0.021
- ↑ 500,000 1.5% $0.015
- ↑ 1,000,000 1.4% $0.014
Odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest are sourced from Polymarket and last synced at Jun 16, 2026 11:42 am.
What could move the odds
Informational summary of factors that may affect reported probabilities.
Market-implied thesis
Pricing treats 2026 as a range-bound path: a mid-cycle retest above $70k is expected, while a clean six-figure break is still discounted.
These are touch barriers before 2027, not year-end price forecasts, so they reflect intrayear volatility as much as terminal valuation.
What could reprice it
The next major repricing input is likely macro-led: CPI/Fed-rate expectations plus spot ETF flow persistence can shift all upside and downside barriers together.
Barrier ladders are sensitive to volatility repricing; one strong macro or flow impulse can move many strikes, not just the nearest level.
Where the market may be weak
The ladder is fragmented across many overlapping binaries, so individual strikes may reflect local order-book pressure rather than a clean BTC distribution.
Resolution says “hit before 2027,” but the context does not specify the exact price source, leaving room for oracle and wick interpretation risk.
Counter-signal
The current curve may be underpricing regime change: ETF absorption, corporate treasury demand, or a leverage unwind could push BTC through distant bands faster than expected.
A barrier market can look orderly until volatility clusters; both upside reflexivity and downside liquidation cascades challenge smooth threshold pricing.
AI-generated market summary, reviewed for clarity. This summary is informational only, may contain errors, and is not financial, investment, betting, or trading advice.
Probability history
Market details
- Resolution criteria
- What price will Bitcoin hit before 2027?
- Category
- Crypto › Bitcoin
- Close date
- January 1, 2027, 5:00 AM UTC
- Market rules summary
- Multi-timeframe Polymarket event. Each listed timeframe is represented by its Yes price on the underlying binary market. View full rules
Bitcoin’s 2026 ladder prices chaos before a clean six-figure breakout
The contract’s path-based rules turn every sharp rally or flush into a live settlement risk. That structure rewards a view of Bitcoin as a wide-range asset in 2026, while leaving a potential blind spot around how fast institutional flows or macro stress can compress the ladder.
Polymarket’s Bitcoin 2026 ladder is priced as a volatility story. The strongest inference from the odds is that buyers see a material chance of both major upside touches and severe downside wicks before the Jan. 1, 2027 close, while assigning little value to extreme super-cycle targets. That combination matters because the market is valuing path, speed, and drawdown risk more heavily than a simple year-end destination.
The rules make a wide trading range more valuable than a clean forecast
The market asks what price Bitcoin will hit before 2027, so each threshold is exposed to intrayear extremes. A brief spike or liquidation wick can matter as much as a sustained regime change. That structure helps explain why the ladder can give 55.5% to a move above $90,000 and 49.5% to a move below $55,000 at the same time. Those prices imply a market braced for a broad range, because both outcomes can resolve if Bitcoin travels far enough in both directions.
The $38.4 million in volume and $7.17 million in open interest give the middle of the curve more significance than a thin novelty market. The $1.64 million liquidity figure still matters, though, because far-tail prices can move sharply if a large buyer decides that convexity is cheap. The pricing therefore carries two signals at once: the center of the ladder has been stress-tested by activity, while the edges may still be sensitive to concentrated opinion.
| Level | Market signal |
|---|---|
| Above $90,000 at 55.5% | A range expansion into prior euphoria zones is treated as the base path. |
| Above $100,000 at 32.5% | Six figures needs follow-through, not only a brief risk-on bid. |
| Below $55,000 at 49.5% | Downside wicks remain central to Bitcoin’s 2026 risk model. |
| Above $200,000 at 3.6% | The market is skeptical of a full liquidity super-cycle by the deadline. |
Six figures is reachable, while the upper tail needs a new liquidity regime
The gap between $90,000 at 55.5% and $100,000 at 32.5% is one of the clearest tells in the ladder. The market appears comfortable pricing a test of the high-$80,000s or low-$90,000s, then demands a heavier burden of evidence for a sustained push into six figures. That is an inference from the steep drop between adjacent upside thresholds, where a relatively small nominal price increase produces a large probability step.
The same logic becomes more severe higher up the curve. The $140,000 level sits at 10.5%, while $200,000 is only 3.6% and $500,000 is 2.4%. The market may be saying that Bitcoin can still deliver classic upside volatility, yet a parabolic repricing requires fresh buying power beyond normal cycle momentum. A convincing catalyst would need to change the market’s estimate of available marginal demand, such as persistent spot accumulation, a broader liquidity cycle, or balance-sheet adoption that survives price drawdowns.
The downside bids lean on drawdown memory more than collapse math
The downside ladder also says something important about trader psychology. A break below $55,000 is priced close to a coin flip, and the next levels decline in a relatively orderly way: $50,000 at 39.5%, $45,000 at 30.5%, and $40,000 at 23.5%. That pattern reads like respect for Bitcoin’s historical drawdown behavior, with limited appetite for catastrophic targets such as $20,000 at 6.5% or $10,000 at 4%.
Recent movement reinforces that interpretation. Polymarket shows the $55,000 and $50,000 downside outcomes each gaining one percentage point over 24 hours. That is a small move, but it points to incremental demand for protection around the upper downside bands. The market is pricing vulnerability to a flush without fully embracing a systemic break. For the odds, this matters because downside repricing can happen quickly if spot liquidity thins or if forced selling turns a technical move into a cascade.
Repricing would come from proof that flows or stress are becoming persistent
The most important catalysts are the ones that would turn a touch probability into a regime assumption. On the upside, repeated closes near major resistance, expanding spot volumes, and visible institutional demand would challenge the current skepticism toward $120,000 and higher. On the downside, a rapid loss of support near the midrange, rising leverage stress, or a macro shock that pushes investors out of risk assets would make the sub-$55,000 cluster look too cheap.
- Upside repricing would likely start with the $100,000 and $110,000 levels, because they sit between plausible range extension and full mania.
- Downside repricing would likely concentrate first in the $55,000 to $40,000 band, where the market already assigns meaningful probability.
- Tail repricing above $200,000 or below $25,000 would need evidence of a structural break, since current prices treat those paths as low-probability outliers.
The main counter-signal is a market structure that dulls old cycle instincts
The strongest challenge to the ladder is that Bitcoin’s market structure may behave differently in 2026 than it did in prior cycles. If institutional holders, exchange-traded products, or long-duration allocators absorb volatility, the downside touch probabilities may be too high. If those same channels create one-way demand during a liquidity upswing, the upper tail may be too low. The ladder’s central tension comes from using Bitcoin’s drawdown memory while also acknowledging a larger and more financialized asset base.
That failure mode matters because the market’s current shape depends on Bitcoin remaining volatile enough to hit both sides of the range, yet constrained enough to avoid a true blow-off top. A calmer, institutionally absorbed Bitcoin would hurt both the downside cluster and some upside touch bets. A reflexive liquidity boom would make the six-figure discounts look stale. The price of this market will change fastest if 2026 stops looking like a wide range and starts looking like a one-direction regime.
Sources
News driving this market
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