A U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, targeting Israel-Hezbollah hostilities along their shared border, began April 16, 2026, for ten days and was extended three weeks on April 23 by President Trump after White House talks between the parties' ambassadors. Despite the formal truce, clashes persist with Israeli airstrikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon and Beqaa Valley, Hezbollah drone attacks killing IDF soldiers, and mutual accusations of violations; IDF Chief Eyal Zamir confirmed April 30 there is no effective ceasefire on the ground. Hezbollah leaders call the deal meaningless amid ongoing Israeli operations. Traders eye mid-May expiration for escalation risks or renewed U.S.-led negotiations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedIsrael x Hezbollah Ceasefire extended by...?
Israel x Hezbollah Ceasefire extended by...?
$15,626,307 Vol.
April 26
100%
$15,626,307 Vol.
April 26
100%
Both extensions of the April 16 ceasefire and new agreements scheduled to take effect before or at the initial agreement's scheduled end will be considered extensions of the ceasefire agreement, provided there is no period during which no ceasefire is in effect.
If a qualifying agreement is officially reached before the resolution date, this market will resolve to “Yes,” regardless of whether the ceasefire extension ultimately takes effect.
An extension of the ceasefire agreement requires clear public confirmation from both the Israeli government and Hezbollah that they have agreed to halt military hostilities against one another for longer than the initially agreed 10-day period, or for an official extension of the ceasefire agreement in place to be otherwise confirmed by an overwhelming consensus of media reporting.
Any form of informal understanding, backchannel communication, de-escalation, or unilateral pause in hostilities without a confirmed agreement on a qualifying extension will not qualify. Similarly, newly agreed-upon humanitarian pauses, limited operational pauses, or temporary tactical stand-downs will not qualify.
A newly agreed-upon broader peace deal will qualify if it includes a qualifying extension of the ceasefire agreement/halt in military hostilities. Agreements that outline future negotiations or de-escalation measures, but do not explicitly commit to extending the ceasefire, will not qualify.
This market’s resolution will be based on official statements from the Israeli government and Hezbollah. However, an overwhelming consensus of credible media reporting confirming that an official ceasefire extension agreement has been reached will suffice.
Market Opened: Apr 16, 2026, 7:47 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: Yes
Disputed
Outcome proposed: Yes
Disputed
Final review
Both extensions of the April 16 ceasefire and new agreements scheduled to take effect before or at the initial agreement's scheduled end will be considered extensions of the ceasefire agreement, provided there is no period during which no ceasefire is in effect.
If a qualifying agreement is officially reached before the resolution date, this market will resolve to “Yes,” regardless of whether the ceasefire extension ultimately takes effect.
An extension of the ceasefire agreement requires clear public confirmation from both the Israeli government and Hezbollah that they have agreed to halt military hostilities against one another for longer than the initially agreed 10-day period, or for an official extension of the ceasefire agreement in place to be otherwise confirmed by an overwhelming consensus of media reporting.
Any form of informal understanding, backchannel communication, de-escalation, or unilateral pause in hostilities without a confirmed agreement on a qualifying extension will not qualify. Similarly, newly agreed-upon humanitarian pauses, limited operational pauses, or temporary tactical stand-downs will not qualify.
A newly agreed-upon broader peace deal will qualify if it includes a qualifying extension of the ceasefire agreement/halt in military hostilities. Agreements that outline future negotiations or de-escalation measures, but do not explicitly commit to extending the ceasefire, will not qualify.
This market’s resolution will be based on official statements from the Israeli government and Hezbollah. However, an overwhelming consensus of credible media reporting confirming that an official ceasefire extension agreement has been reached will suffice.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Outcome proposed: Yes
Disputed
Outcome proposed: Yes
Disputed
Final review
A U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, targeting Israel-Hezbollah hostilities along their shared border, began April 16, 2026, for ten days and was extended three weeks on April 23 by President Trump after White House talks between the parties' ambassadors. Despite the formal truce, clashes persist with Israeli airstrikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon and Beqaa Valley, Hezbollah drone attacks killing IDF soldiers, and mutual accusations of violations; IDF Chief Eyal Zamir confirmed April 30 there is no effective ceasefire on the ground. Hezbollah leaders call the deal meaningless amid ongoing Israeli operations. Traders eye mid-May expiration for escalation risks or renewed U.S.-led negotiations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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