SimpleFunctions
1 source contract·Polymarket 1·refreshed just now·Closes Dec 31, 2026 · 220d

Will Alberta join the US

Liquidity-weighted aggregate sits at 4% across 1 Polymarket contracts.

Implied probability

4%
0%50%100%

Kalshi

not bound

Polymarket

4%

1 contract

Cross-venue gap

single venue

24h move

no pin

24h volume

$75K

1 contracts

Closes

Dec 31, 2026

220 days

Source contractsPriceVolume
Will Alberta join the US? 4¢$75K

30-day trend

0%50%100%-30d-3w-2w-1wtodayAggregate: 4% (13 days, 13 points)Aggregate: 4% on 2026-05-23
Aggregate of 1 contract · 13d

Bracket family

How the bracket ladder is priced.

Each row is one outcome on the venue. Sorted by 24h volume — the heaviest book is at the top.

Cluster 1

Will Alberta join the US

1 contract$75K

Analysis

This probability reflects the current market assessment of Alberta separating from Canada and joining the United States as a state or territory. At 4%, the market prices this as unlikely but not negligible. The low probability reflects several structural barriers: Alberta would require federal and provincial consent under international law, the U.S. would need to approve admission through Congress, and no formal political movement has achieved significant traction toward this outcome. Factors that could shift this probability include sustained economic divergence between Alberta and Canada, escalating political tensions over energy or fiscal policy, or explicit policy shifts from either the U.S. or Canadian federal governments. The nearest catalyst would be major shifts in Canadian-Alberta relations or U.S. immigration policy affecting provinces directly. Current market activity ($51,714 in 24-hour volume) suggests ongoing speculative interest despite the low base probability.

  • No active political party or elected officials in Alberta with meaningful support for joining the U.S.; closest precedent is historical separatism movements which peaked in 1990s-2000s and have since declined
  • Constitutional and legal barriers: Canadian federation requires federal consent for provincial secession; U.S. requires Congressional approval for new states, creating dual veto points
  • Economic integration remains tighter with Canada than U.S.; Alberta trades significantly within North America but lacks independent trade authority to negotiate U.S. membership
  • Recent political tensions (equalization payments, energy policy) have not translated into measurable support for secession in polling data
  • Any institutional change would require sustained political momentum over years, not months, with no scheduled referendum, vote, or formal process currently underway

Recently closed in general

These markets stopped trading. Last odds and any captured outcome are shown above — full settlement detail lives at the venue.

Lateral coverage

Thin contract — here's where the deeper coverage is.

This page aggregates 1 contract (4% headline). At low contract count, the price reflects two participants’ opinions, not a market consensus. The links below are heavier related questions where the orderbook signal is real.

How we compute these odds

SimpleFunctions aggregates live prediction-market contracts from Kalshi and Polymarket. Each slug groups contracts that resolve on the same underlying event, identified by venue event_id.

For binary slugs, the headline probability is the liquidity-weighted mid-price across all bound contracts. For multi-outcome slugs (e.g. elections with 3+ candidates), the headline is the leader’s price; we never arithmetically average disjoint outcomes — that would produce a number with no real-world meaning.

Snapshots refresh every 5 minutes during market hours; daily aggregates are computed at 04:00 UTC. The 30-day sparkline is drawn from per-ticker daily means stored in market_indicator_daily; 24h delta and movement events are derived from the same source.

Last updated on this page: just now.