https://polymarket.com/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026
8
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Miami
Nashville
Orlando
San Francisco
Austin
Atlanta
The other 3 cities are not fully operational.
https://polymarket.com/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026
8
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Miami
Nashville
Orlando
San Francisco
Austin
Atlanta
The other 3 cities are not fully operational.
On Waymo’s official website in the “Serving Riders In” section, exactly 10 cities/regions are listed with active service: Atlanta, Austin, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, Orlando, Phoenix, San Antonio, and the San Francisco Bay Area (counted as one region per market rules).
All other cities shown on the site (Sacramento, Portland, Seattle, etc.) are marked as “coming soon” or in testing phase and do not offer public ride-hailing service as of June 30. According to the market rules, only publicly available services count.
Waymo itself announced and confirmed operations in these 10 cities. There was no official announcement of an 11th fully public launch before the June 30 deadline.
Counting the San Francisco Bay Area as two separate cities would violate the market rule: “If Waymo describes a broader region (e.g., “San Francisco Bay Area”) as a single service area, it will count as one city/region.”https://polymarket.com/ru/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026
On Waymo’s official website in the “Serving Riders In” section, exactly 10 cities/regions are listed with active service: Atlanta, Austin, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, Orlando, Phoenix, San Antonio, and the San Francisco Bay Area (counted as one region per market rules).
All other cities shown on the site (Sacramento, Portland, Seattle, etc.) are marked as “coming soon” or in testing phase and do not offer public ride-hailing service as of June 30. According to the market rules, only publicly available services count.
Waymo itself announced and confirmed operations in these 10 cities. There was no official announcement of an 11th fully public launch before the June 30 deadline.
Counting the San Francisco Bay Area as two separate cities would violate the market rule: “If Waymo describes a broader region (e.g., “San Francisco Bay Area”) as a single service area, it will count as one city/region.”https://polymarket.com/ru/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026
There are official data and clear market rules! How are you twisting everything like this?
There are official data and clear market rules! How are you twisting everything like this?
https://polymarket.com/ru/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026According to the official Waymo website, as of June 30, 2026, the public ride-hailing service is available in exactly 10 cities.
Why is the market currently being decided between 8 and 11? On what basis is 11 being considered, if the official source clearly shows 10?
https://polymarket.com/ru/event/how-many-cities-will-waymo-operate-in-by-june-30-2026/will-waymo-operate-in-11-cities-on-june-30-2026According to the official Waymo website, as of June 30, 2026, the public ride-hailing service is available in exactly 10 cities.
Why is the market currently being decided between 8 and 11? On what basis is 11 being considered, if the official source clearly shows 10?
According to the market rules, it is clearly stated: “distinct cities” — separate cities, not neighborhoods, districts, or parts of agglomerations.
The San Francisco Bay Area is officially described by Waymo as a single service region. Just like “Los Angeles County”, such areas must be counted as one city, not split.
Therefore, the correct count is exactly 10 cities.
According to the market rules, it is clearly stated: “distinct cities” — separate cities, not neighborhoods, districts, or parts of agglomerations.
The San Francisco Bay Area is officially described by Waymo as a single service region. Just like “Los Angeles County”, such areas must be counted as one city, not split.
Therefore, the correct count is exactly 10 cities.
Please move this discussion to https://discord.com/channels/710897173927297116/817444472009785366, maybe someone will answer your question there.
Please move this discussion to https://discord.com/channels/710897173927297116/817444472009785366, maybe someone will answer your question there.
As always, you can't do anything — you don't know anything!
As always, you can't do anything — you don't know anything!
I have told you like 5 times already that mods cannot answer market/rules related questions
I have told you like 5 times already that mods cannot answer market/rules related questions