New Delhi: Cricket lovers heading to stadiums for the next Indian Premier League (IPL) season will find their match-day experience turning more expensive. With the Centre’s sweeping GST 2.0 reforms placing IPL tickets under the newly created 40% tax bracket, fans will now pay significantly higher prices for entry into stadiums.
A ticket that earlier cost ₹1,000 will now be billed at ₹1,400, while a ₹2,000 ticket rises to ₹2,800, and a ₹5,000 pass will set spectators back by ₹7,000. The steep hike, moving tickets up from the earlier 28% slab, has sparked concerns that India’s most popular cricket tournament could become less accessible to the average supporter.
The government, however, insists that the move is part of a broader overhaul to simplify India’s indirect tax regime. Effective September 22, 2025, the four-tier GST structure has been reduced to just two main slabs—5% and 18%—with a new 40% rate carved out for luxury and sin goods, a category where live sporting events like IPL matches have now been placed.
While entertainment costs rise, the changes are designed to bring relief elsewhere. Everyday household items such as toothpaste, shampoo, packaged food, and medicines have been shifted into the 5% slab, down from as high as 18%. Big-ticket items like small cars, televisions, and air conditioners now fall under the 18% rate, compared to the earlier 28%.
Officials estimate that while the tax cuts could reduce government revenues by around ₹48,000 crore ($5.5 billion) in the short term, the long-term gains will come from improved compliance, reduced inflation—by as much as 1.1 percentage points—and stronger consumer demand ahead of the festive season.
For IPL fans, however, the immediate reality is stark: watching their cricketing idols from the stands is now grouped with luxury experiences like casinos, and that means a steeper bill. Even as cinema tickets priced below ₹100 become cheaper under the new structure, live cricket is set to remain a costlier outing, sparking debate over whether the sport should be treated as an elite indulgence or a mass cultural event.














