Trader consensus overwhelmingly favors 70-75% voter turnout in Peru's April 12-13 presidential first-round election, reflecting widespread logistical chaos that suppressed participation below the historical 81% average despite compulsory voting for ages 18-70. Delays hit 13% of Lima polling stations—home to 30% of the electorate—due to ballot delivery failures, new software glitches, power outages, and unprepared staff, preventing over 63,300 voters from casting ballots until an extension to April 13. Public apathy amid a decade of instability, eight presidents, and 35 fragmented candidates further eroded turnout. With ONPE processing 100% of presidential actas by April 22, final certification remains pending; upward shifts above 75% would require substantial overseas or disputed ballot inclusions, while fraud allegations from third-place finisher López Aliaga pose minimal risk to the figure.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated70-75% 90.6%
< 70% 3.1%
80-85% 2.9%
75-80% 2.3%
$244,700 Vol.
$244,700 Vol.
< 70%
3%
70-75%
91%
75-80%
2%
80-85%
3%
> 85%
<1%
70-75% 90.6%
< 70% 3.1%
80-85% 2.9%
75-80% 2.3%
$244,700 Vol.
$244,700 Vol.
< 70%
3%
70-75%
91%
75-80%
2%
80-85%
3%
> 85%
<1%
This market will resolve according to the turnout percentage (% Total Asistentes) in the first round presidential elections, calculated by dividing attendees (Asistentes) by eligible voters (Electores hábiles).
This market will resolve solely based on turnout for the first-round Presidential (Presidencial) election; turnout for Congress members (Congresistas), the Senate (Senado), or the Andean Parliament (Parlamento Andino) will not be considered.
If the reported value falls exactly between two brackets, this market will resolve to the higher range bracket.
If the results are not known definitively by October 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "Other".
This market will resolve solely on the official results as reported by the Peruvian government, specifically the National Office of Electoral Processes (Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales, ONPE) (https://www.onpe.gob.pe/elecciones/) and the National Jury of Elections (Jurado Nacional de Elecciones, JNE) (https://portal.jne.gob.pe/portal/)
Market Opened: Mar 20, 2026, 10:28 AM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...This market will resolve according to the turnout percentage (% Total Asistentes) in the first round presidential elections, calculated by dividing attendees (Asistentes) by eligible voters (Electores hábiles).
This market will resolve solely based on turnout for the first-round Presidential (Presidencial) election; turnout for Congress members (Congresistas), the Senate (Senado), or the Andean Parliament (Parlamento Andino) will not be considered.
If the reported value falls exactly between two brackets, this market will resolve to the higher range bracket.
If the results are not known definitively by October 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "Other".
This market will resolve solely on the official results as reported by the Peruvian government, specifically the National Office of Electoral Processes (Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales, ONPE) (https://www.onpe.gob.pe/elecciones/) and the National Jury of Elections (Jurado Nacional de Elecciones, JNE) (https://portal.jne.gob.pe/portal/)
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus overwhelmingly favors 70-75% voter turnout in Peru's April 12-13 presidential first-round election, reflecting widespread logistical chaos that suppressed participation below the historical 81% average despite compulsory voting for ages 18-70. Delays hit 13% of Lima polling stations—home to 30% of the electorate—due to ballot delivery failures, new software glitches, power outages, and unprepared staff, preventing over 63,300 voters from casting ballots until an extension to April 13. Public apathy amid a decade of instability, eight presidents, and 35 fragmented candidates further eroded turnout. With ONPE processing 100% of presidential actas by April 22, final certification remains pending; upward shifts above 75% would require substantial overseas or disputed ballot inclusions, while fraud allegations from third-place finisher López Aliaga pose minimal risk to the figure.
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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