Trader consensus heavily favors military action against Iran continuing through March 31 at 91.5%, driven by sustained Israel-Iran tensions, including recent Israeli airstrikes on Iranian-linked targets in Syria and Lebanon, alongside U.S. operations against Iran-backed Houthis in the Red Sea. Official statements from Jerusalem and Washington emphasize deterrence without signaling imminent de-escalation, while Tehran's proxy escalations reinforce expectations of prolongation. No verified ceasefire talks or diplomatic breakthroughs have emerged to shift dynamics. Realistic challenges include a surprise multilateral agreement, rapid proxy stand-down, or binding UN Security Council resolution, though historical patterns in shadow conflicts suggest low near-term likelihood amid unresolved nuclear and retaliation disputes.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedMilitary action through March 31 92%
March 31 2.0%
March 29 1.3%
March 22 1.1%
$2,674,225 Vol.
$2,674,225 Vol.
March 18
<1%
March 19
<1%
March 20
<1%
March 21
<1%
March 22
1%
March 23
1%
March 24
1%
March 25
1%
March 26
1%
March 27
1%
March 28
1%
March 29
1%
March 30
1%
March 31
2%
Military action through March 31
92%
Military action through March 31 92%
March 31 2.0%
March 29 1.3%
March 22 1.1%
$2,674,225 Vol.
$2,674,225 Vol.
March 18
<1%
March 19
<1%
March 20
<1%
March 21
<1%
March 22
1%
March 23
1%
March 24
1%
March 25
1%
March 26
1%
March 27
1%
March 28
1%
March 29
1%
March 30
1%
March 31
2%
Military action through March 31
92%
If the date/time of a qualifying strike cannot be confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting by the end of the third calendar day after the listed date, the respective market will resolve to "Yes" regardless of whether a strike is later confirmed to have occurred. If strikes could be verified under the prior rule for each listed day, this market will resolve to "Military action continues through March 31."
For the purposes of this market, a qualifying "strike" is defined as the use of aerial bombs, drones or missiles (including cruise or ballistic missiles) launched by US or Israeli military forces that impact Iranian ground territory or any official Iranian embassy or consulate (e.g., if a weapons depot on Iranian soil is hit by an US/Israeli missile, this will qualify).
Missiles or drones that are intercepted and surface-to-air missile strikes will not be considered, regardless of whether they land on Iranian territory or cause damage.
Actions such as artillery fire, small arms fire, FPV or ATGM strikes directly, ground incursions, naval shelling, cyberattacks, or other operations conducted by US/Israeli ground operatives will not be considered.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 11, 2026, 7:33 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus heavily favors military action against Iran continuing through March 31 at 91.5%, driven by sustained Israel-Iran tensions, including recent Israeli airstrikes on Iranian-linked targets in Syria and Lebanon, alongside U.S. operations against Iran-backed Houthis in the Red Sea. Official statements from Jerusalem and Washington emphasize deterrence without signaling imminent de-escalation, while Tehran's proxy escalations reinforce expectations of prolongation. No verified ceasefire talks or diplomatic breakthroughs have emerged to shift dynamics. Realistic challenges include a surprise multilateral agreement, rapid proxy stand-down, or binding UN Security Council resolution, though historical patterns in shadow conflicts suggest low near-term likelihood amid unresolved nuclear and retaliation disputes.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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