Indian Premier League franchises are tracking toward individual valuations of $15 billion by 2032, a sixfold increase from current levels, driven by escalating media rights and a sponsor base willing to pay American sports premiums for subcontinental reach.
The projection follows the league's $6.2 billion domestic and international media rights sale to Disney Star and Viacom18 in 2022, a 118 percent jump from the prior cycle. That deal reset franchise economics: teams now collect $60-70 million annually in central revenue before kit sponsors, stadium naming rights, or ticket sales. The math is simple. Corporate owners—Reliance, Adani Group, private equity shops already positioned in soccer—are modeling out 2.5 billion television impressions per season across India, the Gulf, and North America. At that scale, a $15 billion valuation implies a roughly 8x revenue multiple, in line with NFL franchises but compressed into a 10-week window.
Three factors explain the velocity. First, the league is adding inventory without diluting scarcity. Two expansion teams joined in 2022, bringing the total to 10 franchises and creating 74 matches per season. That increases broadcast hours while keeping each team's fixtures under 18 games, preserving per-match urgency sponsors pay for. Second, digital rights are being monetized separately for the first time. Viacom18's streaming platform JioCinema reported 450 million viewers during the 2023 season, a figure that enables direct-to-consumer ad insertion and dynamic pricing models American leagues spent a decade building. Third, the player auction caps total team salary at INR 100 crore (roughly $12 million), meaning incremental revenue flows almost entirely to ownership. Compare that to NBA or Premier League structures where 50 percent of revenue goes to players.
The risk is execution speed outpacing governance depth. The IPL's parent body, the Board of Control for Cricket in India, has faced match-fixing inquiries, ownership conflicts, and volatile relationships with global cricket authorities. A $150 billion aggregate league valuation would place it among the world's top five sports properties, but the infrastructure—broadcast redundancy, anti-corruption enforcement, international fixture coordination—remains uneven. One senior executive at a Mumbai-based franchise told colleagues last month that the league office still schedules playoff dates around monsoon forecasts rather than ticketing data. That works at $2 billion per team. It becomes a liability at $15 billion.
Watch for franchise sales in the next 18 months. Kolkata Knight Riders' parent company is reportedly fielding inquiries from U.S. private equity, and any transaction above $3 billion would reset the comp set immediately. Separately, the BCCI is negotiating the next media rights cycle beginning 2028. If that deal eclipses $8 billion, the $15 billion franchise target moves forward three years. Finally, expect movement on international windows. Major League Cricket in the U.S. and the UAE's ILT20 are direct competitors for the same player pool, and the IPL's current April-May slot limits crossover participation. The league that figures out how to own 12 weeks instead of 10 without cannibalizing per-match value will set the standard for the next decade of cricket economics.
Reliance Industries, which owns Mumbai Indians, disclosed INR 12,293 crore in sports and media investments in its latest annual report—a 23 percent year-over-year increase with IPL assets listed as "strategic priority."
The takeaway
IPL franchises could hit **$15B** each by 2032 on media rights growth, but governance depth hasn't caught up to capital inflows.
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