Last updated: April 23, 2026 | Last verified: April 23, 2026
| 💰 Welcome Bonus | New customer “mission” reward (trade $100-$500 to qualify); up to 1 BTC in CRO |
| 🎟️ Promo Code | None required with our link |
| 📊 Fee Structure | ~2-4% per contract (exchange + technology fees) |
| 🌎 U.S. Availability | 49 states + DC (not available in New York) |
| 🏈 Sports Markets | NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, NCAAF, NCAAB, EPL Soccer, MMA, Boxing, Golf, Tennis, Motorsports |
| 💳 Deposit Methods | Apple Pay, Google Pay, debit card, wire transfer, ACH, crypto conversion |
| 📱 Mobile App | iOS (4.7/5 ⭐, 322K+ reviews) & Android (4.5/5, 668K+ reviews) |
| 🔞 Min. Age | 18+ |
| 🏛️ Regulator | CFTC (via Crypto.com Derivatives North America / CDNA) |
Crypto.com started as a cryptocurrency exchange, and that’s still what it does best. But the company has pushed into prediction markets through its CFTC-regulated arm, Crypto.com Derivatives North America (CDNA), and the result is a sports trading product that works fine once you find it, which is not as easy as it could be.
I tested Crypto.com Sports over several weeks in late 2025 and into 2026, placing contracts across NFL, NBA, and MLB markets. The prices were often competitive with what I was seeing on Kalshi and traditional sportsbooks. The fees, while not the lowest in the space, were not as outrageous as some reviews made them sound. And the ability to convert existing crypto holdings into USD for instant trading is a genuine advantage if you’re already in the Crypto.com ecosystem.
The sports prediction section is buried a bit inside an app that does a dozen other things, and the sports market selection is thinner than dedicated platforms.
What Crypto.com Sports actually is
Crypto.com Sports lives inside the Predict section of the Crypto.com platform, or via mobile app. It’s one of several product lines the company offers alongside crypto trading, stock trading, a Visa debit card, DeFi products, and (as of February 2026) a standalone prediction market app called OG.
The sports section offers event contracts on an average range of leagues. You’re buying or selling contracts tied to sporting outcomes, not placing wagers against a house. Crypto.com acts as the exchange, matching buyers and sellers and guaranteeing settlement.
The available contract types are Winner (moneyline equivalent), Spread, and Totals, though not every event offers all three. Futures are available for some leagues. It’s serviceable, but much thinner than what you’ll find on Kalshi or Polymarket, both of which have deeper catalogs and more contract variety.
💡 Pro Tip: Crypto.com also launched OG (OG.com) in February 2026, a standalone prediction market app with its own interface, parlay builder, and a separate welcome bonus of up to $100. OG runs on the same CDNA infrastructure but is purpose-built for prediction markets. If you want Crypto.com’s prediction markets without navigating past all the crypto stuff, OG is worth a look.

Prediction markets vs. traditional sportsbooks
A prediction market is a platform where users trade event contracts with each other. The platform operator handles execution and guarantees both sides get paid. An event contract is tied to a future outcome: you buy or sell based on the likelihood of that outcome happening.
If you think the Detroit Lions will win the Super Bowl, you buy a Yes contract. If they win, the contract pays $1. If they don’t, it expires at zero. The contract price moves based on marketplace demand, just like a stock.
Event contracts have been around for decades but only recently gained mainstream traction in the U.S. Licensed U.S. prediction market operators, including Crypto.com, are federally regulated by the CFTC.
The biggest difference from a traditional sportsbook is who’s on the other side of your trade. At a sportsbook, you’re betting against the house. On Crypto.com Sports, you’re trading against another user. The pricing also looks different. Instead of American odds like -110 or +150, you see implied probabilities: 69% means roughly -222 in sportsbook terms.

During my testing, I found that prices on Crypto.com Sports were occasionally better than what sportsbooks were offering. The Magic were priced at 69% on Crypto.com at the same time FanDuel had them at -235, a slightly worse price for the bettor. It doesn’t always work out that way, but it’s worth cross-referencing.

🔑 Bottom Line: If a contract on Crypto.com Sports shows a lower implied probability than the equivalent moneyline at a sportsbook, you’re getting a better price on Crypto.com. Always compare before buying.
Crypto.com Sports vs. Polymarket
This is one comparison people keep asking about, and the short answer is: they serve different audiences. Polymarket’s international site is the world’s largest prediction market by volume, with lower fees and deeper liquidity on popular markets. Crypto.com Sports is a bolt-on product inside a crypto exchange. The two aren’t really competing for the same user.
| Feature | Crypto.com Sports | Polymarket (U.S.) | Kalshi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 💰 Fees | ~2-4% per contract | 5% taker coefficient | 7% taker coefficient |
| 🌎 Availability | 49 states (no NY) | All 50 states (invite-only beta) | 49 states + DC (no NV) |
| 🏈 Sports Depth | 12 sports, limited contract types | 15+ sports, spreads, props, futures | Widest catalog, live in-game trading |
| 📊 Non-Sports Markets | Politics, economics (limited) | Economics, elections (added Apr 2026) | Economics, politics, culture, weather |
| 💳 Crypto Deposits | ✅ Convert holdings to USD instantly | ✅ USDC accepted (fiat also works) | ❌ Fiat only |
| 🔧 Parlay Builder | ✅ (via OG app) | ❌ | ❌ |
| 📱 App Focus | Prediction markets buried in crypto app | Dedicated prediction market app | Dedicated prediction market app |
Polymarket’s fees are dramatically lower, especially for sports (5% coefficient taker fee on sports contracts as of April 2026). Crypto.com’s all-in costs of 2-4% per contract are among the highest in the regulated prediction market space. That gap matters if you’re an active trader.
The catch with Polymarket is access. The U.S. platform is still in invite-only beta with a waitlist of over one million people. If you can’t get in, it doesn’t matter how good the fees are. Crypto.com Sports, by contrast, is open to anyone in 49 states right now.
Where Crypto.com does have an edge: if you already hold crypto on the platform, you can convert to USD and start trading event contracts instantly. No bank transfer wait, no additional KYC. That’s a meaningful convenience for existing Crypto.com users. Polymarket accepts USDC and fiat, but there’s no equivalent “convert your existing portfolio and trade in 30 seconds” experience.
For most people who are primarily interested in prediction markets, Kalshi or Polymarket will be a better experience. But Crypto.com Sports makes sense as a secondary platform, especially for price shopping on specific contracts.
⚖️ U.S. availability and legal status
Crypto.com Sports is available in 49 U.S. states plus Washington, D.C. The only state where it is completely unavailable is New York. Crypto.com has not obtained a BitLicense from the New York Department of Financial Services, which means NY residents cannot access any Crypto.com products, including the prediction market features.
⚠️ New York Residents: Crypto.com Sports and the OG app are both unavailable in New York. If you’re in NY, Kalshi is your best alternative for CFTC-regulated prediction markets, though some market types may be restricted there as well due to ongoing litigation.
Crypto.com Sports is federally regulated by the CFTC through its derivatives arm, CDNA. Because it offers event contracts rather than traditional sports wagers, it operates under federal jurisdiction and is not subject to state sports betting licensing requirements. This is the same legal framework that allows Kalshi and Polymarket to operate in states that haven’t legalized traditional sports betting.
That said, this legal framework is actively being challenged. Multiple state Attorneys General and tribal gaming interests have filed lawsuits arguing that event contracts on sporting events are functionally sports bets and should be subject to state regulation. As of April 2026, those challenges haven’t shut down any CFTC-regulated prediction market, but the landscape could shift. I’d keep an eye on the state vs. federal legal battle if you’re trading regularly.
🏈 Available sports
Crypto.com Sports covers the major U.S. leagues and a handful of international sports. The list has grown since launch, but at present, it’s still notably shorter than what Kalshi offers.
| Sport | Winner | Spread | Totals | Futures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🏈 NFL | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| 🏀 NBA | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| ⚾ MLB | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| 🏒 NHL | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| 🏈 NCAAF | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| 🏀 NCAAB | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| ⚽ EPL Soccer | ✅ | Limited | Limited | ✅ |
| 🥊 MMA / Boxing | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | Limited |
| ⛳ Golf | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ |
| 🎾 Tennis | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | Limited |
| 🏎️ Motorsports | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | Limited |
The Big Four U.S. leagues (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL) plus college sports get the full treatment with Winner, Spread, and Totals contracts. Everything else is mostly Winner contracts with some futures sprinkled in. No player props on any sport, which is a notable gap if you’re used to the prop market depth on Kalshi or Polymarket.
🎁 Crypto.com Sports new customer offer
Crypto.com Sports does not have a traditional welcome bonus like the $10 credit you get at Kalshi or Polymarket’s deposit-match offer. Instead, they use a “mission” system.
Once you create your account, you’ll be assigned a mission to complete. The threshold is either $100 or $500 in total trading volume, depending on where you live. Hit the threshold and you qualify for a reward in CRO (Crypto.com’s native cryptocurrency). Everyone gets something, and a few randomly selected users receive the equivalent of up to 1 bitcoin. The odds of winning the big prize are unclear.
CRO rewards are used for paying Crypto.com transaction fees and other internal functions. You can convert CRO to USD, but it’s not as straightforward as getting a $10 cash credit deposited directly into your trading account.
Crypto.com also runs occasional promotions tied to specific sporting events like the UEFA Champions League. Check the Events page for current offers.
💡 Pro Tip: The standalone OG app (also powered by Crypto.com’s CDNA) launched with a more generous structured bonus: up to $100 in credits through a tiered system of email verification, phone verification, ID verification, first deposit, and first trade. ⚠️ VERIFY: Confirm the OG $100 bonus tiers are still active before publishing.
💰 Transaction fees
The fee situation on Crypto.com Sports is more confusing than it needs to be, and some reviews have made it sound worse than it is. The $1.99 per contract fee that gets cited a lot only applies to $100 contracts. On smaller contracts the fees are proportionally lower, though the percentage is still higher than what you’ll pay on most competing platforms.
| Contract Value | Open Fee | Settlement Fee (if correct) | Total Fee | % of Contract |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1 contract | $0.01 | $0.01 | $0.02 | ~2% |
| $10 contract | $0.10 | $0.20 | $0.30 | ~3% |
| $100 contract | $0.99 | $0.99 | $1.98 | ~4% |
A 2-4% all-in fee is not ruinous, but it is higher than the competition. Polymarket’s sports taker coefficient is 5%, while Kalshi’s taker coefficient is 7% of contract premium (not face value), which works out lower on most trades. Robinhood charges a flat $0.02 per contract on its prediction markets. Crypto.com’s fees are the highest among major CFTC-regulated platforms I’ve tested.
Crypto.com also charges a 1.49% fee on certain deposit methods, which stacks on top of the trading fees. ACH and crypto conversion deposits are free. If you’re funding with a debit card or Apple/Google Pay, factor in that extra cost.
Account setup and verification
Setting up a Crypto.com account takes about 10-15 minutes. You can sign up through the app using Apple or Google accounts, or create a new account with email and password. Either way, you’ll need to complete Know Your Customer (KYC) verification.
The steps: enter your personal information (phone number, SSN, mailing address), then verify your identity through a third-party vendor that scans your driver’s license or passport and takes a selfie. Once verified, you’re redirected to the app to finish setup and fund your account.
The identity verification felt slightly more involved than what I experienced on Kalshi, probably because Crypto.com also handles cryptocurrency and securities, which carry additional compliance requirements. But it was straightforward and I was trading within about 15 minutes of starting the signup process.
💳 Banking options
Before you can trade event contracts, you need a USD account within Crypto.com (separate from any crypto wallets you might hold). Setting this up takes a couple of minutes inside the app.
Once your USD account is active, you can deposit using Apple Pay, Google Pay, a debit card, wire transfer, or ACH direct deposit from a linked bank account. You can also convert any cryptocurrency holdings in your Crypto.com account to USD instantly at no charge and use those funds for event contracts.
⚠️ Watch Out: Crypto.com charges a 1.49% fee on deposits made via certain payment methods (debit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay). ACH transfers and crypto conversions are fee-free. Check the Terms and Conditions before depositing, because that 1.49% comes off the top before you’ve even placed a trade.
📱 Mobile app experience
The Crypto.com app is well-built and highly rated (4.7/5 on iOS, 4.5/5 on Android), but it was clearly designed around cryptocurrency trading. Finding the sports prediction section requires tapping through the Predict menu, which is not prominently featured. The first time I tried to place a sports contract, it took some scanning to find the right screen.
Once you’re in the Sports section, the experience is clean and functional. Contract pricing is displayed clearly, trades execute quickly, and you can sell your position before or during events to lock in profits. It works. It’s just buried.
If the cluttered navigation bothers you (it bothered me), the OG app provides a cleaner, dedicated prediction market experience on the same CDNA back end.
Customer support
Crypto.com has a detailed FAQ and help section, and the Sports Event Trading page covers the basics well. For anything the help articles don’t address, there’s a live chat option. The agents I interacted with were responsive and could answer basic questions about event contracts, though I didn’t test them on anything particularly complicated.
What we like & don’t like
✅ What works
- Instant crypto-to-USD conversion is a solid feature for existing Crypto.com users. No bank transfer wait, no additional verification. Convert and trade in seconds.
- Available in 49 states. CFTC federal regulation means Crypto.com Sports works in states without legal sports betting, including California, Texas, and Florida.
- Prices on major sporting events were sometimes better than equivalent sportsbook moneylines during my testing.
- High position limits accommodate larger traders. You can sell your position before or during events, which adds flexibility.
- Multiple product lines (crypto, stocks, prediction markets) under one roof if you want a single platform for everything.
❌ What doesn’t
- Sports selection and contract depth are thin compared to Kalshi and Polymarket. No player props, limited spread and totals on non-major sports. (OG.com is a different story)
- Fees are the highest among major platforms. The 2-4% all-in cost adds up for active traders, especially when Polymarket charges 0.75% on sports.
- Not available in New York. The BitLicense issue locks out one of the country’s biggest markets.
- Prediction markets feel like a side project. The app’s focus is crypto, and it shows in the navigation hierarchy.
- The CRO-based new customer reward is less straightforward than cash bonuses offered by competitors.
- The 1.49% deposit fee on debit card and mobile pay methods stacks on top of already-higher trading fees.
Final verdict
Crypto.com Sports is a solid secondary platform that makes the most sense for people already in the Crypto.com ecosystem. The ability to convert crypto to USD and trade instantly is genuinely useful, and the prices on major sporting events are competitive. It fills a niche.
But as a primary prediction market platform? It falls short. The sports catalog is thinner than Kalshi’s, the fees are higher than Polymarket’s, and the app buries prediction markets behind layers of crypto-focused navigation. If prediction markets are your main interest, Kalshi is the more complete option, and Polymarket offers the better deal on fees if you can get past the waitlist.
I wouldn’t discourage anyone from opening a Crypto.com Sports account, especially as a second or third platform for cross-referencing prices. Just don’t expect it to be the only prediction market app you need.
Crypto.com Sports Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use Crypto.com Sports in New York?
No. Crypto.com has not obtained a BitLicense from the New York Department of Financial Services. NY residents are excluded from all Crypto.com products, including Sports, the main crypto exchange, and the OG prediction market app. Kalshi is available in New York, though some sports-specific markets may be restricted there.
How is Crypto.com Sports different from Polymarket?
Both are CFTC-regulated prediction markets, but they serve different audiences. Polymarket US has lower fees, deeper liquidity, and more contract types including spreads and player props. Crypto.com’s advantage is instant crypto-to-USD conversion and broader immediate access (Polymarket’s U.S. platform is still invite-only). For most users focused solely on prediction markets, Polymarket or Kalshi is the better primary platform.
What is OG and how does it relate to Crypto.com Sports?
OG (OG.com) is a standalone prediction market app launched by Crypto.com in February 2026. It runs on the same CDNA exchange infrastructure but has a dedicated interface, a parlay builder, and its own welcome bonus structure. Think of it as Crypto.com’s answer to the complaint that prediction markets were too buried inside the main app.
Why does Crypto.com charge exchange and technology fees?
Traditional sportsbooks bake their margin into the odds (a -110 line is effectively a ~4.5% fee). Prediction markets charge fees more directly. Crypto.com’s 2-4% all-in cost covers platform operation, CDNA exchange costs, and regulatory compliance. It’s transparent but higher than competitors like Polymarket (0.75% on sports) and Robinhood ($0.02 flat per contract).
🛡️ Responsible gambling
Prediction markets carry real financial risk. You can lose your entire position on any contract. Crypto.com provides tools to manage your trading activity, including deposit limits and the ability to self-exclude through their support team.
If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available.
🛡️ Responsible Gambling Resources: Call 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) for confidential support. Visit the National Council on Problem Gambling for additional resources. You can also text “GAMBLER” to 1-800-426-2537 for help via text message.


