US announces new Iran agreement/ceasefire extension by…?
This market will resolve to “Yes” if the U.S. officially announces an extension of the ceasefire agreement between the U.S. and Iran, defined as a publicly announced commitment…
US announces new Iran agreement/ceasefire extension by...?
Several deadline markets are grouped under one Polymarket event. Closed dates are archived; the live view focuses only on active deadlines.

Price, depth and useful dates
An editorial view of the signal: what leads, how much activity is behind it, and which date carries the risk.
Deadline map
What ishappening now
As of May 31, 2026, the Polymarket event “US announces new Iran agreement/ceasefire extension by May 31?” remains open, with the “No” outcome leading at 96% probability. No official U.S. announcement has been made to extend the ceasefire or replace it with a new agreement. The market reflects skepticism about a resolution before the deadline, despite ongoing negotiations. Recent updates show no significant shifts in U.S. or Iranian public statements, with most prior deadline markets (e.g., May 23–29) closing at “No” with 100% probability.
How the market is structured
This is a date ladder market with multiple deadlines, but the primary focus is on the May 31 resolution. The market includes sub-markets for earlier dates (May 23–30) and later ones (June 3, 7, 30). The “No” outcome dominates across all active markets, except for the June 30 deadline, which has a “Yes” price of 67%. The structure requires a qualifying U.S. announcement—either a formal extension or a new agreement—before the specified date. Outcomes depend solely on official U.S. government statements, not Iranian confirmation.
Path to the leading outcome
The “No” outcome is priced in due to the absence of a qualifying announcement. Key factors include:
– No U.S. statement confirming an extension or new framework.
– Negotiations remain stalled, with no public commitment to a successor agreement.
– Historical patterns show the U.S. often delays formal announcements until closer to deadlines.
The market expects no resolution before May 31, as prior deadlines consistently failed to trigger a “Yes.”
What could change the pricing
A single qualifying announcement from the U.S. government would shift the market. This could include:
– A public statement extending the ceasefire (e.g., “The ceasefire is extended for 60 days”).
– A new agreement or framework explicitly replacing the current ceasefire.
– An overwhelming consensus in credible media reporting on such an agreement.
Any deviation from these—such as vague reaffirmations of the existing ceasefire—would not qualify.
Editorial read
The market’s 96% “No” price reflects low confidence in a May 31 resolution, despite the June 30 deadline showing higher “Yes” odds (67%). This suggests traders anticipate a potential extension but not before June. The lack of recent U.S. announcements and stalled negotiations supports the “No” lead. However, the June 30 market’s higher “Yes” price indicates uncertainty about long-term outcomes. Investors should monitor U.S. diplomatic moves closely, as a single statement could rapidly shift probabilities.
This analysis is provided for informational and editorial purposes only. Market signal prices reflect market-implied expectations, not verified outcomes or recommendations. Markets can be illiquid, volatile, and subject to ambiguous resolution criteria.