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Guide

CLOB vs AMM in Prediction Markets: Which Order Matching Is Better?

Central Limit Order Books vs Automated Market Makers for prediction markets. Compare price efficiency, slippage, liquidity, and why Polymarket uses CLOB.

Sarah Whitfield
Markets Editor — Political Forecasting · · 2 min read
✓ Fact-checked · 📅 Updated 1 May 2026 · 2 min read
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Prediction markets operate on two distinct order matching systems: Central Limit Order Books (CLOB) and Automated Market Makers (AMM). Each aggregates market sentiment into prices through fundamentally different mechanisms. Grasping these distinctions enables you to select the most suitable venue and refine your trading approach.

How CLOB Works

A CLOB system pairs incoming buy orders with existing sell orders on the books. When you submit a market order, the matching engine locates the most competitive available counterparty from open positions. Core characteristics include:

  • Prices emerge from direct trader competition, not formulaic calculation
  • Minimal to no slippage when trading modest sizes in sufficiently liquid venues
  • Order book transparency — you see available depth before committing
  • No need for backstop liquidity pools — only genuine supply and demand

Used by: Polymarket, PolyGram, traditional financial exchanges

How AMM Works

An AMM relies on a predetermined mathematical relationship (such as x*y=k) to establish asset prices based on pool composition. Trades execute directly against a reserve pool rather than against other market participants. Core characteristics include:

  • Liquidity perpetually accessible via pool capital
  • Slippage grows proportionally with transaction size (pool balance shifts)
  • Pricing follows an algorithmic rule independent of trader sentiment
  • Liquidity providers supply capital, collect fees, but risk impermanent loss

Used by: Early Augur, Gnosis conditional tokens, some DeFi prediction markets

Which Is Better for Prediction Markets?

FactorCLOBAMM
Price accuracyHigher — set by humans with informationLower — set by algorithm
Slippage (small orders)Zero in liquid marketsAlways present
Slippage (large orders)Depends on book depthAlways higher
Always-on liquidityNo — needs active tradersYes — pool always available
Thin market performanceWorse (wide spread)Better (always trades)

In markets with substantial trader participation, CLOB systems consistently deliver superior price discovery relative to AMM alternatives. Polymarket's selection of CLOB represents the optimal architecture for a high-throughput trading platform.

FAQ

Does PolyGram use CLOB or AMM?
PolyGram integrates with Polymarket's CLOB infrastructure — the identical order-matching system deployed by institutional traders worldwide.
Are there still AMM prediction markets in 2026?
Yes — certain smaller DeFi prediction markets continue operating on AMM protocols. They guarantee liquidity availability but produce inferior pricing compared to CLOB-based markets on widely-watched outcomes.
Can I provide liquidity to PolyGram's CLOB?
Yes — every limit order you place on the CLOB acts as a liquidity source. You determine your own price point, and execution occurs at your chosen level whenever a counterparty accepts your terms.
Sarah Whitfield
Markets Editor — Political Forecasting

Sarah has tracked political prediction markets and election forecasting since the 2020 US cycle. Focus: US presidential, congressional, and UK parliamentary contracts.