Trader consensus on Polymarket assigns very low probability to a U.S. nuclear test soon, reflecting the 1992 testing moratorium and adherence to stockpile stewardship without full-yield explosions. Primary drivers include official policy prioritizing subcritical experiments at Nevada National Security Site, as confirmed by National Nuclear Security Administration updates, amid no primary announcements of resumption. Recent catalysts—Russia's New START suspension, China's arsenal growth, and North Korea's tests—have spurred congressional debates on modernization funding but no shift from test-ban norms. Upcoming events like FY2025 defense budget votes and arms control talks could sway odds, though historical precedent favors continued restraint.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedU.S. nuclear test by...?
U.S. nuclear test by...?
$534,925 Vol.
March 31, 2026
1%
$534,925 Vol.
March 31, 2026
1%
A nuclear test is defined as the intentional non-combat detonation of a device by the US that produces a nuclear chain reaction (fission or fusion), regardless of yield.
Accidents, radiological dispersal devices (bombs that spread radioactive material using conventional explosives such as "dirty bombs"), or actions by third parties will not count toward this market's resolution.
Tests not explicitly claimed by US may still qualify if a clear consensus of credible reporting attributes the nuclear detonation to US. For example, an unclaimed nuclear test analogous to the 1979 "Vela Incident" would count if credible reporting attributes it to the US.
The resolution source for this market will be a broad consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Nov 5, 2025, 1:13 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket assigns very low probability to a U.S. nuclear test soon, reflecting the 1992 testing moratorium and adherence to stockpile stewardship without full-yield explosions. Primary drivers include official policy prioritizing subcritical experiments at Nevada National Security Site, as confirmed by National Nuclear Security Administration updates, amid no primary announcements of resumption. Recent catalysts—Russia's New START suspension, China's arsenal growth, and North Korea's tests—have spurred congressional debates on modernization funding but no shift from test-ban norms. Upcoming events like FY2025 defense budget votes and arms control talks could sway odds, though historical precedent favors continued restraint.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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