Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul filed complaints on Thursday against five major financial and crypto platforms, accusing them of running unlicensed gambling operations in the state.
The companies named are Kalshi, Coinbase, Polymarket, Robinhood, and Crypto.com. Wisconsin filed three separate complaints in Dane County, each targeting a different part of the prediction market ecosystem.

The first complaint names Crypto.com and its derivatives arm. The second targets Polymarket and affiliated entities. The third names Kalshi, along with Robinhood and Coinbase, which both route prediction market orders through Kalshi.
Wisconsin’s core argument is simple. The state says these platforms let users pay money to take a position on a real-world outcome, and collect a fixed payout if they are right. Under Wisconsin law, that is a bet.
The complaints point to specific examples. One involves contracts tied to NCAA tournament games, where a winning position paid out $1 and a losing one returned nothing.
The state also argued that charging transaction fees on each contract is similar to a casino taking a cut of every wager placed on its floor.
The platforms defend themselves by pointing to federal oversight. Kalshi has argued its contracts are swaps listed on a regulated exchange, placing them under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Earlier this month, the Third Circuit sided with Kalshi, treating the CFTC’s decision not to block the contracts as effectively settling the jurisdictional question in Kalshi’s favor.
Wisconsin is not acting alone. Multiple states have now filed challenges against prediction market platforms, each building a legal record around the same core question.
The central issue is whether calling a product a financial instrument is enough to remove it from state gambling laws.
That question has no clear answer yet. Legal experts say the dispute between state gambling regulators and the CFTC is likely to eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
For now, the five companies named in Wisconsin’s complaints face active legal proceedings in the state, with the broader regulatory future of the prediction market industry still unresolved.
The post Wisconsin Sues Kalshi, Coinbase, Polymarket, Robinhood and Crypto.com Over Prediction Markets appeared first on CoinCentral.

