Trader consensus prices "No" at 99% for the Iranian regime falling by April 30, reflecting its institutional resilience amid the 2026 Iran war's aftermath, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's February assassination and son Mojtaba's ascension despite injury reports. Recent fragile U.S.-mediated ceasefire since April 8 has held despite Strait of Hormuz closures and IRGC command frictions, with no mass defections, widespread protests, or military collapse in the past week. Security forces remain loyal, projecting defiance via naval readiness statements. Historical survival of uprisings like 2022-2026 protests reinforces stability. Low-probability shifts could stem from ceasefire breakdown, leadership vacuum, or economic blockade escalation triggering unrest.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedWill the Iranian regime fall by April 30?
Will the Iranian regime fall by April 30?
$34,692,658 Vol.
$34,692,658 Vol.
$34,692,658 Vol.
$34,692,658 Vol.
This requires a broad consensus of reporting indicating that core structures of the Islamic Republic (e.g. the office of the Supreme Leader, the Guardian Council, IRGC control under clerical authority) have been dissolved, incapacitated, or replaced by a fundamentally different governing system or otherwise lost de facto power over a majority of the population of Iran. This could occur via revolution, civil war, military coup, or voluntary abdication, but only qualifies if the Islamic Republic no longer exercises sovereign power.
Routine political events such as elections, reforms, or leadership succession do not qualify. Internal coups or power shifts that preserve the Islamic Republic’s core structures also do not qualify. Only a clear break in continuity—such as a new provisional government, revolutionary council, or constitution replacing the Islamic Republic will qualify.
Partial loss of territory or challenges from rebel or exile groups will not qualify unless the Islamic Republic no longer administers the majority of the Iranian population within Iran.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 5, 2026, 12:03 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This requires a broad consensus of reporting indicating that core structures of the Islamic Republic (e.g. the office of the Supreme Leader, the Guardian Council, IRGC control under clerical authority) have been dissolved, incapacitated, or replaced by a fundamentally different governing system or otherwise lost de facto power over a majority of the population of Iran. This could occur via revolution, civil war, military coup, or voluntary abdication, but only qualifies if the Islamic Republic no longer exercises sovereign power.
Routine political events such as elections, reforms, or leadership succession do not qualify. Internal coups or power shifts that preserve the Islamic Republic’s core structures also do not qualify. Only a clear break in continuity—such as a new provisional government, revolutionary council, or constitution replacing the Islamic Republic will qualify.
Partial loss of territory or challenges from rebel or exile groups will not qualify unless the Islamic Republic no longer administers the majority of the Iranian population within Iran.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus prices "No" at 99% for the Iranian regime falling by April 30, reflecting its institutional resilience amid the 2026 Iran war's aftermath, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's February assassination and son Mojtaba's ascension despite injury reports. Recent fragile U.S.-mediated ceasefire since April 8 has held despite Strait of Hormuz closures and IRGC command frictions, with no mass defections, widespread protests, or military collapse in the past week. Security forces remain loyal, projecting defiance via naval readiness statements. Historical survival of uprisings like 2022-2026 protests reinforces stability. Low-probability shifts could stem from ceasefire breakdown, leadership vacuum, or economic blockade escalation triggering unrest.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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