Kalshi Crypto / Dogecoin

Kalshi Dogecoin markets

Dogecoin's up/down markets track the original meme coin, whose short-window moves are sentiment-driven and often abrupt. Below are the live DOGE ladders closing soon, followed by what DOGE’s own settle history says about how often these windows go up, and how often a move keeps going.

DOGE's direction is less tied to the broader crypto tape than BTC or ETH, which shows up as a different up/down mix in its history.

DOGE ladders, live
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We’re still building enough clean DOGE settle history to publish odds here. The live ladders above update in real time meanwhile.

Common questions
How do Kalshi Dogecoin markets work?
Kalshi lists Dogecoin (DOGE) as up/down markets that settle every 15 minutes, plus hourly markets with strikes at set price increments. A 15-minute up market pays out if DOGE's reference price is higher at the close than at the start of the window. You buy YES if you think it finishes up and NO if you think it finishes down, at a price between 1 and 99 cents that reflects the market's implied probability.
Are Dogecoin up/down markets predictable?
Over the short windows these markets cover, DOGE direction is close to a coin flip, which is why prices sit near 50 cents right before settlement. Our settle history on this page shows the measured up rate and how often a move continued, but past frequencies are not a forecast, and fees plus the spread mean a naive coin-flip strategy loses money over time.
What are the hourly Dogecoin strike markets?
The hourly markets ask whether DOGE will be above a specific price at the top of the hour, with many strikes listed at set increments. Strikes far from the current price almost always resolve the same way, so we exclude those from the direction statistics and keep only the genuinely contested at-the-money strike, so the odds measure direction rather than strike distance.
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See the full board across every coin on Kalshi Crypto, or the exchange-wide calibration on the Truth Machine. Educational only, not financial advice.