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IPL 2026: Influencer Marketing Spend Set to Cross ₹700 Crore, Report Reveals

The Indian Premier League is no longer just a cricket tournament - it is fast becoming one of the most powerful digital marketing ecosystems in the country. And in 2026, that transformation is set to reach a new milestone.

According to a report by creator intelligence platform Qoruz, influencer marketing spending around the IPL is projected to cross ₹700 crore this season, marking a sharp rise from ₹250 crore in 2023 and ₹550 crore in 2025. The numbers point to a consistent annual growth rate of around 40%, underlining how rapidly brands are shifting their focus toward creator-led campaigns.

IPL 2026

This surge is part of a much larger digital advertising boom linked to the IPL. Total digital ad spend during the tournament stood between ₹3,200-₹3,800 crore in 2025 and is expected to rise further to ₹3,800-₹4,400 crore in 2026. Influencer marketing alone is now estimated to account for nearly 16-18% of that spend - a significant share for a segment that barely held prominence a few years ago.

More IPL creators, more conversations

One of the most striking trends is the explosion in creator participation. The number of creators producing IPL-related content has nearly doubled - from around 645,000 in 2023 to 1.2 million in 2025 - and is expected to exceed 1.5 million this year.

That growth has directly translated into engagement. Social media interactions around IPL content have jumped from 1.4 billion in 2023 to 2.6 billion in 2025, an increase of nearly 86%. More importantly, engagement is no longer concentrated among a handful of big influencers. Instead, it is being spread across a wider pool of creators, making the ecosystem more fragmented - but also more dynamic.

Instagram continues to dominate this space, accounting for over half of all IPL creator content. YouTube follows as the second-largest platform, with X and Facebook contributing smaller but still relevant shares.

IPL 2026 is just the starting point

While sports creators still lead engagement, they are no longer the only drivers of IPL conversations. Entertainment creators, meme pages, fashion influencers, and even food and travel content creators are now part of the mix.

This reflects a shift in how audiences consume the IPL. It's not just about watching matches anymore - it's about participating in the culture around them. Memes, reactions, post-match breakdowns, and lifestyle content have all become integral to the IPL experience.

Brands spreading their bets

Brand strategy is evolving alongside this shift. While top-tier influencers still command a large chunk of budgets, there is a clear move toward distributing spends across multiple creator tiers.

Mid-level, micro, and even nano influencers are playing a bigger role in driving engagement, especially during key moments of the tournament. This approach allows brands to stay visible across different audience segments rather than relying solely on a few high-profile faces.

In terms of sectors, FMCG brands continue to lead IPL influencer spending, followed by e-commerce, entertainment, telecom, and fintech companies. The diversity of categories highlights how the IPL has become a universal marketing platform cutting across industries.

The real action happens after the match

Perhaps the most interesting insight from the report is how engagement is distributed across the match cycle. While pre-match hype and live reactions generate attention, nearly half of all engagement happens after the game.

This is when fans and creators break down performances, celebrate wins, debate decisions, and create viral content. For brands, this post-match window is emerging as the most valuable phase - where conversations deepen and content travels further.

Beyond cricket, into culture

The IPL's evolution into a digital-first, creator-driven ecosystem reflects a broader shift in how sport is consumed. It is no longer confined to broadcast screens. It lives across reels, tweets, YouTube breakdowns, and meme pages.

What the Qoruz report makes clear is that the IPL is no longer just being watched - it is being experienced, discussed, and reshaped in real time by millions of creators and fans.

And in that ecosystem, attention is the real currency.

Story first published: Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 19:40 [IST]
Other articles published on Mar 18, 2026
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