The Indian government has revised the Goods and Services Tax (GST) rate on Indian Premier League (IPL) match ticketsโraising it from 28% to 40%. This new rate places IPL tickets in the same extraordinary tax bracket as luxury goods and high-end entertainmentโsignaling a significant shift in how premium sporting events are taxed. The changes come into effect on September 22, 2025.
What Has Changed?
- The GST on IPL tickets has been hiked to 40%, up from the earlier 28%, aligning them with โluxuryโ and โsinโ goods like casinos and betting services.
- As a result, a โน1,000 ticket will now cost โน1,400 (up from โน1,280), reflecting a โน120 hike. Similarly, a โน2,000 ticket will go up to โน2,800, and a premium โน5,000 ticket will cost โน7,000.
- Importantly, this 40% GST does not apply to recognised sporting eventsโfor those, tickets over โน500 continue to attract the standard 18% GST, while tickets under โน500 remain exempt.
Why It Matters
1. Impact on Fans
Live IPL match attendance just became costlier. Alongside higher GST, fans may also face increased stadium fees and service charges, raising the overall experience cost. IndiatimesIndia TodayNDTV Sports
2. Luxury Entertainment Label
Classifying IPL tickets under the highest tax slab places the sport alongside non-essential and premium entertainment, reflecting changing policy priorities. The Economic Times
3. Broad Tax Restructuring
This tax increase is part of a broader GST reform simplifying the tax structure into two main slabs (5% and 18%) and a new 40% slab for high-end discretionary services.
Quick Summary Table
| Category | GST Rate (New) | GST Rate (Old) | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| IPL Match Tickets | 40% | 28% | Significantly higher cost for live-match attendees |
| Recognised Sporting Events (>โน500) | 18% | 18% | No changeโremains standard rate |
| Recognised Sporting Events (โคโน500) | Exempt | Varies | Remains tax-free |


