Trader consensus slightly favors Democrats (51.5%) to gain control of the Senate in 2026 midterms, reflecting a razor-thin map where Republicans defend 22 seats plus two specials against Democrats' 13 amid a current 53-47 GOP majority. The race stays tightly contested due to four tossups—Georgia (Ossoff defending), open Michigan (Peters retiring), open North Carolina (Tillis retiring), and Maine (Collins)—plus leans in Alaska, Texas (Cornyn primary runoff), and Ohio special, fueled by recent GOP retirements like Steve Daines (Montana, March 4) and Alan Armstrong (Oklahoma, March 24) creating additional opens in red states. A Democratic generic ballot lead of 5.3% as of late March signals midterm backlash potential against the incumbent presidential party; separation could arise from primary outcomes, candidate quality in battlegrounds (e.g., Roy Cooper in NC), economic trends, or shifts in swing-state polling ahead of summer primaries.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedWhich party will win the Senate in 2026?
Which party will win the Senate in 2026?
$1,379,876 Vol.
$1,379,876 Vol.

Democratic Party
52%

Republican Party
49%
$1,379,876 Vol.
$1,379,876 Vol.

Democratic Party
52%

Republican Party
49%
Senate control is defined as having more than half of the voting Senate members, or half of the voting Senate members and the Vice Presidency.
If the outcome of this election is ambiguous given the above rules, this market will remain open until the Majority Leader of the US Senate is selected following the 2026 US general election, at which point it will resolve to the party the majority leader is affiliated with at the time of their election to that position. If the elected majority leader does not caucus with any listed party this market will resolve “Other”.
Determination of which party controls the Senate after the 2026 US Senate elections will be based on a consensus of credible reporting, or if there is ambiguity, final federal and/or state election authority certification or other final official determination of the 2026 election results.
Market Opened: Jul 11, 2025, 3:47 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...We anticipate rolling out a new rewards and oracle-resolution system later this year that will generate returns on your positions, at which point there will be a simple 1-click migration.
Senate control is defined as having more than half of the voting Senate members, or half of the voting Senate members and the Vice Presidency.
If the outcome of this election is ambiguous given the above rules, this market will remain open until the Majority Leader of the US Senate is selected following the 2026 US general election, at which point it will resolve to the party the majority leader is affiliated with at the time of their election to that position. If the elected majority leader does not caucus with any listed party this market will resolve “Other”.
Determination of which party controls the Senate after the 2026 US Senate elections will be based on a consensus of credible reporting, or if there is ambiguity, final federal and/or state election authority certification or other final official determination of the 2026 election results.
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...We anticipate rolling out a new rewards and oracle-resolution system later this year that will generate returns on your positions, at which point there will be a simple 1-click migration.
Trader consensus slightly favors Democrats (51.5%) to gain control of the Senate in 2026 midterms, reflecting a razor-thin map where Republicans defend 22 seats plus two specials against Democrats' 13 amid a current 53-47 GOP majority. The race stays tightly contested due to four tossups—Georgia (Ossoff defending), open Michigan (Peters retiring), open North Carolina (Tillis retiring), and Maine (Collins)—plus leans in Alaska, Texas (Cornyn primary runoff), and Ohio special, fueled by recent GOP retirements like Steve Daines (Montana, March 4) and Alan Armstrong (Oklahoma, March 24) creating additional opens in red states. A Democratic generic ballot lead of 5.3% as of late March signals midterm backlash potential against the incumbent presidential party; separation could arise from primary outcomes, candidate quality in battlegrounds (e.g., Roy Cooper in NC), economic trends, or shifts in swing-state polling ahead of summer primaries.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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