Polymarket announced that it has received an Amended Order of Designation from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), enabling the firm to resume offering services to US customers.
Prediction marketplace Polymarket has secured formal approval to resume operations in the United States after receiving clearance from the US CFTC, according to a statement on Tuesday.
The regulator issued an updated designation order authorizing the platform to operate as an intermediary marketplace under the full regulatory framework governing federally supervised exchanges.
The revised designation clears the way for Polymarket to bring on licensed brokerages and accept US users, with trading channeled through futures commission merchants and supported by standard custody and regulatory reporting infrastructure.
"This approval allows us to operate in a way that reflects the maturity and transparency that the US regulatory framework demands," said Shayne Coplan, founder and CEO of Polymarket. "We're grateful for the constructive engagement with the CFTC and look forward to continuing to demonstrate leadership as a regulated US exchange."
Under the amended order, Polymarket claims to have strengthened its market infrastructure, including enhanced surveillance, supervision protocols, clearing processes, and Part 16 regulatory reporting capabilities.
The platform will also roll out additional rules and operational procedures required for intermediated trading ahead of its official US relaunch.
Polymarket ceased offering services to US customers after the CFTC fined the platform $1.4 million for operating an unregistered derivatives exchange in a 2022 enforcement action.
Polymarket has also been pursuing expansion efforts with the $112 million acquisition of QCX, a CFTC-licensed derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, in July.