Trader consensus on Polymarket for Donald Trump's 2026 foreign visits reflects presidential travel precedents amid no official itinerary released post-inauguration. Odds favor allies from his first term like Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the UK, driven by enduring bilateral ties and "America First" diplomacy signals in transition calls with leaders such as Netanyahu and MBS. Geopolitical flashpoints, including Middle East stability and NATO commitments, underpin probabilities, while multilateral summits like G20 (US presidency in 2026) may limit outbound trips. Recent cabinet picks for State and Defense could shape priorities; watch early 2025 trips for directional cues on 2026 schedule.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$127,044 Vol.

United Kingdom
73%

Israel
63%

Canada
39%

Mexico
43%

Saudi Arabia
46%

Japan
49%

Germany
66%

South Korea
44%

France
78%

Russia
19%

Ukraine
27%

Taiwan
5%

China
92%

Italy
56%

Oman
22%

India
33%

Belarus
14%

Turkey
75%

Syria
11%

North Korea
14%

Ireland
52%
$127,044 Vol.

United Kingdom
73%

Israel
63%

Canada
39%

Mexico
43%

Saudi Arabia
46%

Japan
49%

Germany
66%

South Korea
44%

France
78%

Russia
19%

Ukraine
27%

Taiwan
5%

China
92%

Italy
56%

Oman
22%

India
33%

Belarus
14%

Turkey
75%

Syria
11%

North Korea
14%

Ireland
52%
For the purpose of this market, a "visit" is defined as Trump physically entering the terrestrial or maritime territory of the listed country. Whether or not Trump enters the country's airspace during the timeframe of this market will have no bearing on a positive resolution.
The primary resolution source for this information will be official information from government of the United States of America, official information from Trump or released by his verified social media accounts (e.g. https://twitter.com/POTUS), however, a consensus of credible reporting will also be used.
Market Opened: Nov 5, 2025, 11:21 AM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket for Donald Trump's 2026 foreign visits reflects presidential travel precedents amid no official itinerary released post-inauguration. Odds favor allies from his first term like Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the UK, driven by enduring bilateral ties and "America First" diplomacy signals in transition calls with leaders such as Netanyahu and MBS. Geopolitical flashpoints, including Middle East stability and NATO commitments, underpin probabilities, while multilateral summits like G20 (US presidency in 2026) may limit outbound trips. Recent cabinet picks for State and Defense could shape priorities; watch early 2025 trips for directional cues on 2026 schedule.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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