US pressure for an agreement by June has driven months of trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi and Geneva, yet core disputes over territorial control, security guarantees, and Ukrainian neutrality remain unresolved, sustaining low trader expectations for a formal ceasefire by the month’s end. Recent prisoner exchanges and limited progress on monitoring mechanisms have not bridged gaps, while Putin’s June rejection of Zelenskyy’s direct-meeting proposal and ongoing strikes underscore continued hostilities. Temporary holiday pauses earlier in 2026 further highlighted enforcement challenges without addressing underlying positions. Scheduled diplomatic follow-ups and any escalation or de-escalation signals in the coming weeks could still shift momentum before the deadline.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedRussia x Ukraine ceasefire agreement by...?
$3,722,125 Vol.
June 30
4%
October 31
31%
December 31
48%
$3,722,125 Vol.
June 30
4%
October 31
31%
December 31
48%
A ceasefire agreement refers to any mutually-agreed suspension of direct military engagement between Russia and Ukraine, which is either officially announced by both countries or confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting to have been mutually agreed by both countries.
A broader peace deal, normalization agreement, political framework, truce, or humanitarian pause will qualify if it includes a mutually agreed suspension of direct military engagement, to be effective on a specified date. Agreements that outline future negotiations or de-escalation measures without an explicit, dated commitment to stop fighting will not qualify.
Any form of informal understanding, backchannel communication, de-escalation without an announced agreement, or unilateral pause in hostilities will not be considered a ceasefire agreement.
Only agreements which constitute a general pause in the conflict will qualify. Agreements which only apply to specific conflict categories (e.g. restrictions on certain target categories or certain locations) will not qualify.
If a qualifying agreement is officially reached before this market’s end date, this market will resolve to “Yes,” regardless of whether the ceasefire agreement officially takes effect after that date.
The primary resolution sources for this market will be official information from the governments of Russia and Ukraine and a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: May 12, 2026, 11:28 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A ceasefire agreement refers to any mutually-agreed suspension of direct military engagement between Russia and Ukraine, which is either officially announced by both countries or confirmed by a consensus of credible reporting to have been mutually agreed by both countries.
A broader peace deal, normalization agreement, political framework, truce, or humanitarian pause will qualify if it includes a mutually agreed suspension of direct military engagement, to be effective on a specified date. Agreements that outline future negotiations or de-escalation measures without an explicit, dated commitment to stop fighting will not qualify.
Any form of informal understanding, backchannel communication, de-escalation without an announced agreement, or unilateral pause in hostilities will not be considered a ceasefire agreement.
Only agreements which constitute a general pause in the conflict will qualify. Agreements which only apply to specific conflict categories (e.g. restrictions on certain target categories or certain locations) will not qualify.
If a qualifying agreement is officially reached before this market’s end date, this market will resolve to “Yes,” regardless of whether the ceasefire agreement officially takes effect after that date.
The primary resolution sources for this market will be official information from the governments of Russia and Ukraine and a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...US pressure for an agreement by June has driven months of trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi and Geneva, yet core disputes over territorial control, security guarantees, and Ukrainian neutrality remain unresolved, sustaining low trader expectations for a formal ceasefire by the month’s end. Recent prisoner exchanges and limited progress on monitoring mechanisms have not bridged gaps, while Putin’s June rejection of Zelenskyy’s direct-meeting proposal and ongoing strikes underscore continued hostilities. Temporary holiday pauses earlier in 2026 further highlighted enforcement challenges without addressing underlying positions. Scheduled diplomatic follow-ups and any escalation or de-escalation signals in the coming weeks could still shift momentum before the deadline.
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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