Moving capital onto Polymarket is no longer the multi-step headache it used to be. In 2026, the platform has integrated advanced “cross-chain” technology that allows you to fund your account from almost any major blockchain—including Bitcoin and Solana—in a single transaction.1

Whether you are moving funds from Ethereum, a Layer 2, or even a centralized exchange, here is how to bridge to Polymarket efficiently.


Method 1: The Official Polymarket “One-Click” Bridge (Recommended)

The fastest way to fund your account is using Polymarket’s native deposit tool, which handles the bridging and swapping for you behind the scenes.

  1. Log in to your Polymarket account and click Deposit.
  2. Select “Other Chains” or “Cross-Chain Deposit.”
  3. Choose Your Source: Select the chain you are moving funds from (e.g., Arbitrum, Base, Solana, or Ethereum).2
  4. Copy the Unique Address: Polymarket will generate a temporary deposit address specifically for that chain.
  5. Send Your Assets: Send your USDC, ETH, or SOL to that address.3
    • What happens next: Polymarket automatically bridges the asset to Polygon and swaps it into USDC.e (the platform’s native collateral). Your balance will update in minutes.

Method 2: Using Third-Party “Fast” Bridges

If you are a power user moving large sums (>$10,000) and want to minimize slippage, using a specialized bridge protocol is often cheaper.

  • Across Protocol: Currently the fastest bridge for Polymarket traders. It typically completes transfers from Ethereum or L2s to Polygon in under 10 seconds for a fee of just a few cents.
  • Stargate/LayerZero: Ideal if you are moving funds from “non-EVM” chains or looking for deep liquidity.
  • DeBridge: Often used by the “Polymarket Bro” community to move funds directly from Solana to Polygon with very low friction.

Method 3: The Centralized Exchange (CEX) Shortcut

If your funds are still on an exchange like Coinbase, Binance, or Kraken, you don’t actually need to “bridge” at all.

  1. Go to the Deposit page on Polymarket and copy your Polygon Wallet Address.
  2. Go to your exchange and select Withdraw USDC.
  3. Critical Step: When the exchange asks for a network, select Polygon (PoS).
  4. By withdrawing directly to the Polygon network, the exchange handles the “bridging” for you. This is usually the cheapest method, often costing less than $1.

The “USDC vs. USDC.e” Confusion (Updated for 2026)

A common point of friction on Polymarket is the difference between “Native USDC” and “Bridged USDC (USDC.e).”

  • USDC.e: This is the version Polymarket uses for trading.
  • Native USDC: If you deposit “Native” USDC (the newer Circle version), you will see a button in your Polymarket wallet that says “Activate Funds.”
  • Action: Clicking this will perform a one-time swap to convert your Native USDC into the trading collateral needed for the Polymarket exchange.

Comparison of Bridging Methods

MethodAvg. TimeCostBest For
Official Polymarket Tool2–5 MinsLow/MediumEase of use; supports Solana/BTC.
Across Protocol<15 SecsVery LowSpeed and high-frequency traders.
CEX Withdrawal5–10 MinsFlat Fee (~$1)Moving money from “Fiat” to Polymarket.
Polygon Portal20+ MinsHigh (L1 Gas)Users who prefer the “official” chain bridge.

Pro Tip for 2026: If you are bridging from a new wallet, ensure you have a tiny amount of POL (formerly MATIC) to cover gas fees on the Polygon network.4 While Polymarket offers “gasless” trading, you occasionally need POL for certain wallet-level approvals.

Ready to fund your account? Head over to the Polymarket Deposit Page to get your unique bridge address.

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