Indian Premier League franchises are forecast to reach average valuations of $15 billion by 2032, up from current marks clustering near $1 billion, according to a valuation report released this week. Kolkata Knight Riders—controlled by the Shah Rukh Khan family and Mehta Group—sits atop the list at an estimated $1.3 billion, a figure that reflects both brand leverage and the franchise's participation in emerging T20 leagues beyond India.
The projection arrives as IPL media rights enter their second cycle under the $6.2 billion five-year deal struck with Star Sports and Viacom18 in 2022, which delivers roughly $1.24 billion annually to the Board of Control for Cricket in India. Franchises collect approximately 50% of central revenue, with gate receipts, sponsorships, and merchandise forming the balance. The $15 billion figure assumes sustained growth in consumer spending on cricket, continued expansion of franchise portfolios into Caribbean Premier League and UAE's International League T20, and incremental media rights appreciation when the current contract expires in 2027.
What matters for allocators sizing stakes is the gap between headline valuations and cash-flow multiples. Knight Riders' $1.3 billion valuation likely prices in the family office's ownership of Trinbago Knight Riders and Los Angeles Knight Riders in Major League Cricket, creating a portfolio effect that standalone IPL operations cannot replicate. Franchises without secondary league assets—those still dependent on IPL's 74-day season for the majority of revenue—face narrower exit multiples when private equity groups or sovereign funds conduct diligence. The question is not whether the league's aggregate enterprise value reaches $150 billion across ten teams; it is which franchises command premium multiples because they operate year-round talent pipelines and global brand activations.
The report's timing coincides with increased chatter among family offices about whether to enter the IPL via secondary stakes or wait for potential expansion teams. The BCCI has not confirmed plans for an eleventh or twelfth franchise, but sponsor executives and kit manufacturers report ongoing inbound calls about hypothetical launch economics. A new franchise would likely command an entry fee exceeding $1 billion, given that the most recent additions—Gujarat Titans and Lucknow Super Giants—paid $940 million and $932 million respectively in 2021. Meanwhile, existing owners are quietly exploring partial sales to infrastructure funds and Gulf-based sovereign wealth vehicles, testing whether minority stakes can clear at valuations implying $1.5 billion enterprise values for top-tier teams.
Watch for movement in three areas before the 2026 season. First, whether Knight Riders or Mumbai Indians announce strategic investors at valuations confirming or exceeding the $1.3 billion mark, which would anchor pricing for secondary transactions across the league. Second, BCCI's decision on expansion—expected by late 2025 if it proceeds—and the structure of any auction process. Third, the performance of franchise-owned league assets outside India, particularly whether Caribbean and UAE competitions generate material cash flow or remain brand-building exercises. Knight Riders' MLC team plays its 2025 season in July; gate and streaming figures will circulate among the family offices.
The Shah Rukh Khan family has not sold equity in Knight Riders since the Mehta Group took a stake in 2008. That sixteen-year hold period tells you more than the valuation report.