Traders overwhelmingly back fewer than 8000 US flight delays on March 25, with 98.3% implied probability, driven by Bureau of Transportation Statistics data showing spring averages of 6,000-7,500 daily delays amid improving on-time performance at major carriers like American, Delta, and Southwest. Recent weeks have seen minimal disruptions—no FAA ground stops, labor strikes, or widespread air traffic control issues—following winter storm peaks, while National Weather Service forecasts predict mild conditions across key hubs like Atlanta, Chicago, and Dallas. This commanding lead reflects "wisdom of crowds" on normalized operations, though sudden events like unexpected thunderstorms, crew shortages, or technical outages at busy airports could spike volumes toward 10,000+.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated<8000 98.2%
8000-8500 <1%
8500-9000 <1%
9500-10000 <1%
$14,222 Vol.
$14,222 Vol.
<8000
98%
8000-8500
1%
8500-9000
1%
9000-9500
1%
9500-10000
1%
10000-10500
1%
10500-11000
1%
>11000
1%
<8000 98.2%
8000-8500 <1%
8500-9000 <1%
9500-10000 <1%
$14,222 Vol.
$14,222 Vol.
<8000
98%
8000-8500
1%
8500-9000
1%
9000-9500
1%
9500-10000
1%
10000-10500
1%
10500-11000
1%
>11000
1%
The resolution source for this market is https://www.flightaware.com/live/cancelled/yesterday, specifically the "Total delays within, into, or out of the United States yesterday" figure on the "FlightAware.com live flight delay and cancellation statistics for yesterday" table when checked at the specified time.
If the reported value falls exactly between two brackets, then this market will resolve to the higher range bracket.
If the resolution source becomes permanently unavailable, or is otherwise unavailable at the resolution time up until 6 PM ET on that date, market will resolve to the lowest available bracket.
Market Opened: Mar 24, 2026, 6:03 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Traders overwhelmingly back fewer than 8000 US flight delays on March 25, with 98.3% implied probability, driven by Bureau of Transportation Statistics data showing spring averages of 6,000-7,500 daily delays amid improving on-time performance at major carriers like American, Delta, and Southwest. Recent weeks have seen minimal disruptions—no FAA ground stops, labor strikes, or widespread air traffic control issues—following winter storm peaks, while National Weather Service forecasts predict mild conditions across key hubs like Atlanta, Chicago, and Dallas. This commanding lead reflects "wisdom of crowds" on normalized operations, though sudden events like unexpected thunderstorms, crew shortages, or technical outages at busy airports could spike volumes toward 10,000+.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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