Trader consensus on the next US-Iran diplomatic meeting venue remains tightly contested, with Pakistan and no meeting by June 30 both near 26%, reflecting uncertainty in indirect negotiations amid stalled JCPOA revival efforts and regional tensions. Pakistan's edge stems from its neutral stance, recent border de-escalation with Iran, and offers to mediate South Asian security dialogues, positioning it as a viable host alongside traditional sites like Oman (10.5%) and Qatar (6.5%). Oman hosted prior rounds on nuclear issues and prisoner swaps, but lack of fresh official announcements from State Department or Iranian officials keeps odds fragmented. An envoy dispatch, summit invitation, or Vienna-style multilateral signal could surge a frontrunner; otherwise, time pressure favors no-meeting resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedWhere will the next US-Iran diplomatic meeting happen?
Where will the next US-Iran diplomatic meeting happen?
Pakistan 27%
No Meeting by June 30 25%
Oman 11%
Qatar 7%
$15,828 Vol.
$15,828 Vol.
Pakistan
27%
No Meeting by June 30
25%
Oman
11%
Qatar
7%
Switzerland
5%
Other - Middle East/North Africa
4%
Other
4%
Turkey
4%
UAE
3%
Austria
2%
Italy
2%
Other - Europe
2%
Saudi Arabia
2%
Egypt
2%
Russia
2%
Iran
2%
USA
2%
Iraq
1%
Kazakhstan
1%
Pakistan 27%
No Meeting by June 30 25%
Oman 11%
Qatar 7%
$15,828 Vol.
$15,828 Vol.
Pakistan
27%
No Meeting by June 30
25%
Oman
11%
Qatar
7%
Switzerland
5%
Other - Middle East/North Africa
4%
Other
4%
Turkey
4%
UAE
3%
Austria
2%
Italy
2%
Other - Europe
2%
Saudi Arabia
2%
Egypt
2%
Russia
2%
Iran
2%
USA
2%
Iraq
1%
Kazakhstan
1%
A diplomatic meeting refers to a deliberate meeting between representatives of the listed countries who are acting in an official capacity and are authorized to engage in negotiation or diplomacy regarding US-Iranian relations on behalf of their governments. Meetings conducted indirectly, for example, through designated mediators, facilitators, or interlocutors acting with the knowledge and authorization of the relevant governments, will qualify.
Brief greetings, chance encounters, or talks otherwise not deliberately aimed at diplomacy or negotiation will not count.
The meeting must be in-person (including indirect meetings) and must be publicly acknowledged by either government or reported by a consensus of credible media. Remote meetings, phone calls, or other meetings where the relevant parties are not present will not count.
If the next diplomatic meeting between government representatives of the United States and Iran takes place in any country in the Middle East or North Africa other than the listed options, this market will resolve to “Other - Middle East/North Africa”.
If the next diplomatic meeting between government representatives of the United States and Iran takes place in any country in Europe other than the listed options, this market will resolve to “Other - Europe”.
For the purposes of this market, additional countries’ regions will be determined based on the US State Department’s regional classifications in the “Countries and Areas List” (https://www.state.gov/countries-and-areas-list). Any country classified as part of “Europe and Eurasia” will be considered to be in Europe. Any country classified as part of “Near East (Middle East and North Africa)” will be considered to be in the Middle East.
If the next diplomatic meeting between government representatives of the United States and Iran takes place in any unlisted country which is not classified in either of the specified regions, this market will resolve to “Other”.
If no qualifying meeting takes place by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to “No Meeting by June 30”.
If a qualifying meeting occurs in more than one country, resolution will be based on where the first qualifying diplomatic session takes place.
The resolution sources for this market will be official information from the governments of the United States and Iran, and a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Mar 24, 2026, 7:36 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus on the next US-Iran diplomatic meeting venue remains tightly contested, with Pakistan and no meeting by June 30 both near 26%, reflecting uncertainty in indirect negotiations amid stalled JCPOA revival efforts and regional tensions. Pakistan's edge stems from its neutral stance, recent border de-escalation with Iran, and offers to mediate South Asian security dialogues, positioning it as a viable host alongside traditional sites like Oman (10.5%) and Qatar (6.5%). Oman hosted prior rounds on nuclear issues and prisoner swaps, but lack of fresh official announcements from State Department or Iranian officials keeps odds fragmented. An envoy dispatch, summit invitation, or Vienna-style multilateral signal could surge a frontrunner; otherwise, time pressure favors no-meeting resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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