Australia and France lead Polymarket's jury winner odds at 31.5% and 27.5% implied probabilities, reflecting trader consensus on their jury-friendly entries announced in early March: Delta Goodrem's soaring ballad "Eclipse," leveraging her powerhouse vocals and proven Eurovision pedigree, and 17-year-old opera sensation Monroe's dramatic "Regarde!," echoing past jury darlings like France's recent successes. Finland trails at 12.5% after Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonen's violin-driven "Liekinheitin" topped UMK on February 28, praised for artistic flair but facing stiffer competition. With Denmark close behind, the race hinges on compositional depth and vocal prowess—key jury differentiators—amid ongoing national finals; previews and Vienna rehearsals could shift sentiment before the May 16 grand final.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedEurovision 2026: Jury Winner
Eurovision 2026: Jury Winner
Australia 32%
France 27%
Finland 13%
Denmark 9%
$597,423 Vol.
$597,423 Vol.
Australia
32%
France
27%
Finland
13%
Denmark
9%
Czechia
3%
Malta
2%
Sweden
2%
Ukraine
1%
Latvia
1%
Israel
1%
Croatia
1%
Greece
1%
Serbia
1%
Bulgaria
1%
Italy
1%
Germany
1%
Cyprus
1%
United Kingdom
1%
Austria
1%
Moldova
1%
Montenegro
1%
Portugal
1%
Albania
1%
Georgia
<1%
Poland
<1%
San Marino
<1%
Belgium
<1%
Azerbaijan
<1%
Armenia
<1%
Estonia
<1%
Lithuania
<1%
Luxembourg
<1%
Romania
<1%
Switzerland
<1%
Norway
<1%
Australia 32%
France 27%
Finland 13%
Denmark 9%
$597,423 Vol.
$597,423 Vol.
Australia
32%
France
27%
Finland
13%
Denmark
9%
Czechia
3%
Malta
2%
Sweden
2%
Ukraine
1%
Latvia
1%
Israel
1%
Croatia
1%
Greece
1%
Serbia
1%
Bulgaria
1%
Italy
1%
Germany
1%
Cyprus
1%
United Kingdom
1%
Austria
1%
Moldova
1%
Montenegro
1%
Portugal
1%
Albania
1%
Georgia
<1%
Poland
<1%
San Marino
<1%
Belgium
<1%
Azerbaijan
<1%
Armenia
<1%
Estonia
<1%
Lithuania
<1%
Luxembourg
<1%
Romania
<1%
Switzerland
<1%
Norway
<1%
This market will resolve to the country that receives the highest number of points from the professional juries in the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026.
All ties will be broken according to EBU's official Eurovision rules.
If no winner is announced by July 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "No".
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Eurovision (https://eurovision.tv/), including live footage of Eurovision 2026, however a consensus of credible reporting will suffice.
Market Opened: Mar 9, 2026, 6:05 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...This market will resolve to the country that receives the highest number of points from the professional juries in the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026.
All ties will be broken according to EBU's official Eurovision rules.
If no winner is announced by July 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "No".
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from Eurovision (https://eurovision.tv/), including live footage of Eurovision 2026, however a consensus of credible reporting will suffice.
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Australia and France lead Polymarket's jury winner odds at 31.5% and 27.5% implied probabilities, reflecting trader consensus on their jury-friendly entries announced in early March: Delta Goodrem's soaring ballad "Eclipse," leveraging her powerhouse vocals and proven Eurovision pedigree, and 17-year-old opera sensation Monroe's dramatic "Regarde!," echoing past jury darlings like France's recent successes. Finland trails at 12.5% after Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonen's violin-driven "Liekinheitin" topped UMK on February 28, praised for artistic flair but facing stiffer competition. With Denmark close behind, the race hinges on compositional depth and vocal prowess—key jury differentiators—amid ongoing national finals; previews and Vienna rehearsals could shift sentiment before the May 16 grand final.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
Beware of external links.
Beware of external links.
Frequently Asked Questions