DraftKings and FanDuel have launched prediction market offerings that are reaching profitability faster than any product line in either company's history, according to executives at both firms. The new verticals—betting on political outcomes, entertainment awards, and other non-sports events—are profitable within months of launch, a sharp contrast to the multi-year customer acquisition burns that defined their core sportsbook expansions.
The speed matters because both companies have spent years trying to improve unit economics. FanDuel parent Flutter Entertainment reported $314 million in U.S. EBITDA for Q3 2024, but still carries customer acquisition costs north of $400 per user in new states. DraftKings spent $1.1 billion on sales and marketing in 2023 alone. Prediction markets bypass much of that. The products require lighter regulatory approval in most states, attract users who self-select into higher engagement, and generate revenue from spreads and transaction fees rather than hold percentages on high-variance outcomes. One operator noted that prediction market users place 3.2x more bets per month than sportsbook-only customers, with lower churn.
The implications ripple through how both companies will allocate capital in 2025. DraftKings is expected to expand prediction offerings into 12 additional states by Q2, targeting jurisdictions where full sports betting remains stalled in legislatures. FanDuel is testing integration with its daily fantasy product, creating a bundled offering that keeps users inside one ecosystem. Both are watching Polymarket, which processed over $3.8 billion in trading volume around the 2024 U.S. election, most of it from offshore users. The licensed operators see an arbitrage: regulated prediction markets in the U.S., with KYC and tax reporting built in, pulling volume from unregulated platforms. The path is already visible in New Jersey, where FanDuel's prediction vertical drove 18% of new account sign-ups in October, according to state filings.
Media companies are paying attention. ESPN Bet, which has struggled with user retention since its January 2024 relaunch, is exploring prediction markets as a way to differentiate from DraftKings and FanDuel on the commoditized sportsbook side. Fanatics, which entered sports betting in 2023, is in early talks with prediction market technology providers, according to two people familiar. The risk for all entrants is that prediction markets commoditize faster than sportsbooks did. If the product is genuinely easier to profit from, competition will flood in. The first mover advantage DraftKings and FanDuel currently enjoy will compress within 18 months.
Watch for FanDuel's Q4 earnings call in late February, where Flutter is expected to break out prediction market contribution for the first time. DraftKings will likely detail its state expansion roadmap during its March investor day. Both companies are also hiring for compliance roles in Washington, D.C., ahead of expected federal scrutiny on prediction markets tied to elections. The Senate Commerce Committee has already requested briefings.
The unit economics tell the story. If prediction markets deliver profitability in quarters instead of years, the $2.3 billion DraftKings and FanDuel collectively spent on customer acquisition since 2020 starts to look like a sunk cost they no longer need to repeat.