In March 2021, WeFunder CEO Nick Tommarello wrote that he "hope[s] some limited liquidity would be available in a few years."
https://wefunder.com/comments/134452
This market defines "a few years" as five at most---so, March 2026.
WeFunder will be 14 years old then.
For the purpose of this market, the liquidity must be accessible to (some) of those who invested via WeFunder. So liquidity for crowdsourcing investors (even if limited to investors in early rounds) counts as YES. But limited liquidity for employees and seed investors would not count as YES.
Examples of liquidity events: IPO, acquisition, dividend issuance, recapitalization, buyout, and liquidation with return to investors.
Secondary markets will count if (i) it becomes a streamlined and common way to trade start-up equity by then and (ii) Wefunder securities are tradeable on such markets for crowdsourcing investors.